High Cholesterol Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed High Cholesterol stocks.

High Cholesterol Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 4 LLY Can Pfizer Challenge Lilly and Novo Nordisk in the Obesity Market?
May 4 LLY Eli Lilly Raised Its Outlook. Is the Stock a Buy Now?
May 3 LLY Amazon Stock Is on a Roll. Here’s Why It’s on This Firm’s ‘Best Ideas List.’
May 3 LLY Amgen's peek at its GLP-1 drug trial results heightens competition in obesity market
May 3 LLY Eli Lilly Remains Expensive Here - Minimal Margin Of Safety
May 3 LLY Analyst unveils Amgen stock price target after weight-loss drug data
May 3 LLY Amgen (AMGN) Q1 Earnings Top, Stock Up on Obesity Drug Update
May 3 LLY Weight-loss drug competition heats up. Is Wegovy in trouble?
May 3 LLY Pharma Stock Roundup: LLY, NVO, PFE Q1 Results, JNJ's New Plan to Resolve Talc Claims
May 3 LLY Amgen Knocks Novo Nordisk's Ozempic Stock Rally. Its Stock Is Flying.
May 3 LLY US STOCKS-Wall St set to open sharply higher on soft jobs data
May 3 LLY Amgen shares soar as executives outline obesity drug push
May 3 LLY US STOCKS-Futures rise on Apple, Amgen boost; jobs data awaited
May 3 LLY How the CFOs of Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk are coping with ‘unprecedented demand’ for weight-loss drugs
May 3 LLY Eli Lilly: Don't Overpay For Miracle Drugs
May 2 LLY 1 Wall Street Analyst Thinks Eli Lilly Stock Is Going to $892. Is It a Buy?
May 2 LLY Analysts reveal Eli Lilly stock price targets after earnings
May 2 LLY Weight Loss Competition Heats Up In Britain, Online Pharmacies Slash Prices for Wegovy and Mounjaro
May 2 LLY Amgen Soars After CEO Gives Update on Experimental Obesity Drug
May 2 LLY Market Chatter: Novo Nordisk, Eli Lilly's Weight-Loss Drugs Get Price Cuts in UK
High Cholesterol

Hypercholesterolemia, also called high cholesterol, is the presence of high levels of cholesterol in the blood. It is a form of hyperlipidemia, high blood lipids, and hyperlipoproteinemia (elevated levels of lipoproteins in the blood).Elevated levels of non-HDL cholesterol and LDL in the blood may be a consequence of diet, obesity, inherited (genetic) diseases (such as LDL receptor mutations in familial hypercholesterolemia), or the presence of other diseases such as type 2 diabetes and an underactive thyroid.Cholesterol is one of three major classes of lipids which all animal cells use to construct their membranes and is thus manufactured by all animal cells. Plant cells do not manufacture cholesterol. It is also the precursor of the steroid hormones and bile acids. Since cholesterol is insoluble in water, it is transported in the blood plasma within protein particles (lipoproteins). Lipoproteins are classified by their density: very low density lipoprotein (VLDL), intermediate density lipoprotein (IDL), low density lipoprotein (LDL) and high density lipoprotein (HDL). All the lipoproteins carry cholesterol, but elevated levels of the lipoproteins other than HDL (termed non-HDL cholesterol), particularly LDL-cholesterol, are associated with an increased risk of atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease. In contrast, higher levels of HDL cholesterol are protective.Avoiding trans fats and replacing saturated fats in adult diets with polyunsaturated fats are recommended dietary measures to reduce total blood cholesterol and LDL in adults. In people with very high cholesterol (e.g., familial hypercholesterolemia), diet is often not sufficient to achieve the desired lowering of LDL, and lipid-lowering medications are usually required. If necessary, other treatments such as LDL apheresis or even surgery (for particularly severe subtypes of familial hypercholesterolemia) are performed. About 34 million adults in the United States have high blood cholesterol.

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