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Hypocholesterolemia



Hypocholesterolemia is the presence of abnormally low (hypo-) levels of cholesterol in the blood (-emia). While hypercholesterolemia, the presence of high cholesterol, has been linked strongly with cardiovascular disease, it is much less certain whether low cholesterol levels are intrinsically harmful.

Contents

Classification

According to most authorities, only total cholesterol levels below 160 mg/dL or 4.1 mmol/l are to be classified as "hypocholesterolemia"[1].

Causes

Possible causes of low cholesterol are:[citation needed]

Role in disease

With the increased use of medication to suppress cholesterol, some have expressed concern that lowering cholesterol levels excessively will itself cause disease.

Specific disease entities

Demographic studies suggest that cholesterol levels form an U-shape curve when plotted against mortality; this suggests that low cholesterol is associated with increased mortality, mainly due to depression, cancer, hemorrhagic stroke and respiratory diseases.[3] It is possible that whatever causes the low cholesterol level also causes mortality, and that the low cholesterol is simply a marker of poor health.[1]

Links with depression have been supported by studies.[4] In contrast, no evidence was found for a link with hemorrhagic stroke (although higher cholesterol levels conferred a relative protection), and neither did statin drugs worsen the risk.[5].

The Heart Protection Study found no increase in either respiratory disease or neuropsychiatric illness in a large trial population taking a statin drug.[6]

Elderly

In the elderly, low cholesterol may confer a health risk that may not be offset by the beneficial effects of cholesterol lowering.[7] Similarly, for elderly patients admitted to hospital, low cholesterol may predict short-term mortality.[8]

Critical illness

In the setting of critical illness, low cholesterol levels are predictive of clinical deterioration, and are correlated with altered cytokine levels.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b Criqui MH. (1994). Very Low Cholesterol and Cholesterol Lowering. Leaflet 71-0059. American Heart Association.
  2. ^ Marini A, Carulli G, Azzarà A, Grassi B, Ambrogi F (1989). "Serum cholesterol and triglycerides in hematological malignancies". Acta Haematol. 81 (2): 75–9. PMID 2496554.
  3. ^ Jacobs D, Blackburn H, Higgins M, et al (1992). "Report of the Conference on Low Blood Cholesterol: Mortality Associations". Circulation 86 (3): 1046–60. PMID 1355411.
  4. ^ Suarez EC (1999). "Relations of trait depression and anxiety to low lipid and lipoprotein concentrations in healthy young adult women". Psychosom Med 61 (3): 273–9. PMID 10367605.
  5. ^ Woo D, Kissela BM, Khoury JC, et al (2004). "Hypercholesterolemia, HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, and risk of intracerebral hemorrhage: a case-control study". Stroke 35 (6): 1360–4. doi:10.1161/01.STR.0000127786.16612.A4. PMID 15087556.
  6. ^ (2002) "MRC/BHF Heart Protection Study of cholesterol lowering with simvastatin in 20,536 high-risk individuals: a randomised placebo-controlled trial". Lancet 360 (9326): 7–22. PMID 12114036.
  7. ^ Schatz IJ, Masaki K, Yano K, Chen R, Rodriguez BL, Curb JD (2001). "Cholesterol and all-cause mortality in elderly people from the Honolulu Heart Program: a cohort study". Lancet 358 (9279): 351–5. PMID 11502313.
  8. ^ Onder G, Landi F, Volpato S, et al (2003). "Serum cholesterol levels and in-hospital mortality in the elderly". Am. J. Med. 115 (4): 265–71. doi:10.1016/S0002-9343(03)00354-1. PMID 12967690.
  9. ^ Gordon BR, Parker TS, Levine DM, et al (2001). "Relationship of hypolipidemia to cytokine concentrations and outcomes in critically ill surgical patients". Crit. Care Med. 29 (8): 1563–8. PMID 11505128.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hypocholesterolemia". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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