Excess 'good cholesterol' may
shorten your life
Too much of a good
thing may not always be better for your health. Researchers have shown that
high levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol - commonly touted as
"good cholesterol" for helping to reduce risk of stroke and heart
attack - may increase a person's risk of premature death as much as its low
levels.
The research
suggests that intermediate levels of HDL cholesterol may increase longevity.
"The
findings surprised us," said the study's senior author Ziyad Al-Aly,
Assistant Professor at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis,
Missouri.
"Previously it was thought that raised
levels of the good cholesterol were beneficial. The relationship between
increased levels of HDL cholesterol and early death is unexpected," Al-Aly
said.
Cholesterol is a fatty
substance found in blood that can narrow and block heart vessels, causing
cardiovascular disease and stroke.
For years, HDL
cholesterol has been credited with helping to remove plaque-building "bad
cholesterol" from arteries.
For this
study, researchers studied kidney function and HDL cholesterol levels in more
than 1.7 million male veterans from October 2003 through September 2004.
Researchers
then followed participants until September 2013.
In the study,
published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, the
researchers showed that both high and low HDL cholesterol levels were
associated with an increased risk of dying among study participants with all
levels of kidney function.
"Too low
and too high are both associated with higher risk of death," Al-Aly said.
Whether
maintaining intermediate HDL cholesterol levels may increase longevity will
need to be explored in future studies, Al-Aly said.
Source: www.thehealthsite.com
13.08.2016
Great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave
and impossible to forget
Walt Whitman
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