Soledad O'Brien Shares Family's Battle With Cholesterol
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ERIN KARAS
Who taught you how to swing? SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Jonathan and Erin Karas and their 9-year-old son Max appear to be the picture of health, active, happy, and staying fit. But this family carries a genetic condition. It's called familial hypercholesterolemia or FH, which causes too much cholesterol to build up in the blood. SPEAKER 1
Five, four, three, two, one. Great job. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
9-year-old Max has a severe form of the disease. So he literally gets the cholesterol scrubbed from his blood. Then, the blood is recycled back into his body. Jonathan Karas, who's 41, has been battling his own case of FH since age 13. JONATHAN KARAS
I just heard, oh, oh, do you have a family history. Oh, yeah, this grandfather, this uncle. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
So you knew in your family you had a number of people who had very, very, very high cholesterol levels. JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah, my grandmother, my mother, her sister. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
But you never necessarily connected it as a genetic disease. JONATHAN KARAS
Right. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
It's estimated that more than one million Americans have FH, a genetic disease that makes receptors in the liver unable to remove excess LDL, or bad cholesterol. It puts people at 20 times the risk of early heart disease. And 90% of people affected don't even know they have it. JONATHAN KARAS
That's what's the scariest thing about FH. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
You didn't feel sick. JONATHAN KARAS
Is that you don't feel sick. Yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
So at what point did you have the big giant wake-up call that you had a serious problem? JONATHAN KARAS
There was the heart attack. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
So you were 28 years old. JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
That's an amazingly young age to have a heart attack. JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah, and the nurse said I think you're having a heart attack. And that was the first time, uh, sorry, I heard those words. And it still affects me today obviously. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
He was so young doctors didn't believe he was having a heart attack. JONATHAN KARAS
Immediately, I got asked by about 50 different people, did you do cocaine last night. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Everyone assumed it was drugs. JONATHAN KARAS
Yes. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Were there people who didn't believe you when you said no? JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
They thought you're lying. 12 hours later, Karas went under the knife. Three stent procedures opened up arteries that were nearly 100% blocked. Doctors immediately prescribed him cholesterol-lowering drugs. JONATHAN KARAS
After my heart attack, the cardiologist recommended to take a low dose of blood pressure medication. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Dr. James Underberg, director of the Bellevue Lipid Clinic in New York, says that drugs are required to treat this genetic condition. DR. UNDERBERG
And that's something that often, for a young, healthy person otherwise, it's hard to wrap their arms around. They say, I run. I eat right. My cholesterol is high. I must be able to fix it myself. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Those look like horse pills. Oh my gosh. JONATHAN KARAS
So this is the highest dose of atorvastatin. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN: So the popular statin.
JONATHAN KARAS
Yes. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Geez. JONATHAN KARAS
These are large. This is the 80 milligram. It's the highest dose. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Wow, wow. JONATHAN KARAS
But it works. ERIN KARAS
Come on guys. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Karas has been working at it with a daily routine. [DRUMBEATS] He's in a band, so his cardio exercise is drumming, four to five hours each week. He and his wife Erin, who also has high cholesterol, are very disciplined with their low-fat diet.
ERIN KARAS
I'm going to do baby spinach, a red bell pepper. I'm going to do some tomatoes, cucumbers. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Taking statins has made the biggest difference. Once high at 326, Jonathan's cholesterol is now down to 86. With diet and exercise, he's aiming to make it 70, considered ideal for people who've suffered a heart attack. He's not yet tried a new class of drugs called PCSK9 inhibitors, which can help lower cholesterol even further. Do you worry that you could have another heart attack? JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah, it's on my mind. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
All the time? JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah, yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Like every day? JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah, pretty much. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
For Max, today's procedure will last six hours. MAX KARAS
So it takes my blood, and it cleans it and puts it back in, which is actually kind of mind-blowing. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
His more severe form of FH means more aggressive treatment. JONATHAN KARAS
I don't like seeing him have to deal with this, you know, probably 10 times worse than what I had to deal with. So it's stressful. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
I can't even imagine a six-hour procedure every week. JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
You know, you get through this week, you know you come back next week. JONATHAN KARAS
I think it's more difficult for us. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Than for him. JONATHAN KARAS
Than for him. He's kind of used to it. He's very good about it. He knows that it's helping him. SARAH DE FERRANTI
Hi there. How are you, Max? SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Max's gene mutation comes from both of his parents. SARAH DE FERRANTI
All right. Let's see how this sounds, OK. Max had a cholesterol around 1,000 when he first showed up, with normal being 100 or less. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
By the end of treatment, Max's cholesterol is down to 35. The fix is only temporary. JONATHAN KARAS
I feel good physically. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN: And emotionally?
JONATHAN KARAS
And emotionally. There's ups and downs. I want to be a picture of health, even though emotionally it's more about him. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
Your son. JONATHAN KARAS
Yeah. SOLEDAD O'BRIEN
A son he is teaching that caring for this disease is a lifelong commitment. For WebMD, I'm Soledad O'Brien.