HDL Cholesterol Inversely
Related to Stroke Risk
Levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL),
the "good" cholesterol, are inversely associated with stroke risk
in elderly men, according to a new study.
"HDL cholesterol has been inversely
associated with coronary heart disease," Dr. J. David Curb, of
Pacific Health Research Institute, Honolulu, and colleagues write
in the American Journal of Epidemiology. "Associations with stroke
are less clear, particularly among the elderly."
The researchers therefore examined
the association between HDL cholesterol levels and stroke risk
in 2444 men between the ages of 71 and 93 years who were enrolled
in the Honolulu Heart Program. The investigators measured levels
of HDL cholesterol at examinations between 1991 and 1993 and followed
the men through the end of 1998.
One hundred thirty-seven strokes
occurred during follow-up that were attributable to either a blood
clot (89 cases) or bleeding in the brain (48 cases).
No association was found between
HDL cholesterol and strokes caused by bleeding in the brain. However,
the incidence of stroke caused by blood clots in the brain declined
with increasing HDL cholesterol levels. The team found a 2.7-fold
increased risk of a blood clot-related stroke among men with low
HDL cholesterol levels compared with those with high levels.
The risk of clot-related stroke
declined as HDL cholesterol levels increased for men with normal
total cholesterol concentrations and for men with high blood pressure
or diabetes, Curb and colleagues add.
These findings indicate that HDL
cholesterol is an important risk factor for clot-related stroke
in the elderly. "In conjunction with other risk factors," the
researchers suggest, "measurement of HDL cholesterol (commonly
available from routine lipid screening) could become an increasingly
useful tool for identifying elderly persons at high risk of stroke."
American Journal of Epidemiology,
July 15, 2004.
Reference
Source 89
August 16, 2004
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