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High Good
Cholesterol More Important Than Low Bad Cholesterol For Heart
Protection
Date: 04 Apr 2006 -
Having a high level of HDL cholesterol - the good cholesterol -
is more important than having a low level of LDL - the bad
cholesterol - in protecting individuals from heart attack,
according to a study published in the March issue of American
Heart Journal by researchers from the Indiana University School
of Medicine and pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline, Inc.
The researchers looked at the history of heart disease, age,
sex, race, weight and other heart
disease risk factors in almost 7,000 patients. The patients were
predominately inner city residents and included a large number
of African Americans, women, smokers and overweight people. The
researchers found the strongest predictor of future heart attack
was previous heart disease; age was the second strongest
predictor and the third strongest predictor was HDL level.
“Most of the drugs that lower LDL also tend to raise HDL so
until our study, when a person's health improved, you couldn't
tell if that was due to lowering of the LDL or raising the HDL
level,” says study senior author William Tierney, M.D., IU
Chancellor's Professor of Medicine and a Regenstrief Institute
Inc. research scientist. “We now know that more good cholesterol
is more important than less bad cholesterol.
“Having a high total cholesterol reading may not be bad, in fact
it may be good if it's the HDL component which is high.
Conversely, a low total cholesterol reading, is not necessarily
good because it can hide a low HDL level,” said Dr. Tierney.
This study was repeated with stroke as the outcome rather than
heart disease, and the same results were the same: HDL
cholesterol was a strong predictor of stroke, and the LDL
cholesterol was not.
Current guidelines for treating cholesterol focus only on LDL
cholesterol. That's not enough: they should focus on both HDL
and LDL, according to Dr. Tierney. He calls for guidelines to be
revised to encourage physicians and their patients to pay closer
attention to HDL cholesterol.
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