Why medication is not recommended for high blood cholesterol

Dyslipidemia is not impossible to control with medication, it depends on the condition. Mildly elevated blood lipids can be regulated by exercise and diet. Severe hyperlipidemia requires pharmacologic intervention.
Lipids such as triglycerides, phospholipids and cholesterol contained in plasma are collectively called lipids. Normal lipids are essential for basic cellular metabolism. Mild dyslipidemia may be due to diet and activity, and usually recovers with dietary modification, exercise and other interventions, and no medication is usually needed to control such elevations.
However, long-term severe dyslipidemia will cause plasma lipoprotein disorders, which in turn will lead to coronary heart disease, atherosclerosis and other diseases, and need to be controlled with medications such as Rosuvastatin, in order to improve vascular endothelial function and stabilize plaque.
When dyslipidemia occurs, it is recommended to go to the hospital in time; the above drugs need to be used under the guidance of clinicians.