That's the 64,000 Dollar Question. Remember that show, from back in the 1950s?GrannyH wrote:All this is food for thought! Just wonder how dangerous my high cholesterol would be without crestor???
Tex
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That's the 64,000 Dollar Question. Remember that show, from back in the 1950s?GrannyH wrote:All this is food for thought! Just wonder how dangerous my high cholesterol would be without crestor???
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/256495092 women aged 60 years and over (mean 82.2, SD 8.6) living in a nursing home and free from overt cancer were followed-up for 5 years. 53 died during this period; necropsy revealed cancer in only 1 patient. Serum total cholesterol at entry ranged from 4.0 to 8.8 mmol/l (mean 6.3, SD 1.1). Cox's proportional hazards analysis showed a J-shaped relation between serum cholesterol and mortality. Mortality was lowest at serum cholesterol 7.0 mmol/l, 5.2 times higher than the minimum at serum cholesterol 4.0 mmol/l, and only 1.8 times higher when cholesterol concentration was 8.8 mmol/l. This relation held true irrespective of age, even when blood pressure, body weight, history of myocardial infarction, creatinine clearance, and plasma proteins were taken into account.
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/ab ... 72/17/1335Conclusions.
—Our findings do not support the hypothesis that hypercholesterolemia or low HDL-C are important risk factors for all-cause mortality, coronary heart disease mortality, or hospitalization for myocardial infarction or unstable angina in this cohort of persons older than 70 years.
We found little or no association in women between all-cause mortality and any of the lipid measures studied.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8113829Abstract
Serum total cholesterol (TC) and systolic blood pressure (SBP) were investigated as risk factors for mortality from ischemic heart disease among 272 elderly men and women during 17 years of follow-up. For men, TC was not significantly associated with mortality from ischemic heart disease. Among women, a significant positive association was found (p-trend = 0.03 when adjusted for age, body mass index, SBP, alcohol consumption, smoking, and the prevalence of myocardial infarction, angina pectoris and diabetes mellitus). Among women a significant positive association was also observed for SBP after adjustment for all potential confounders (p-trend = 0.05). Among men, the adjusted association with SBP was not statistically significant. The results suggest that TC and SBP are stronger independent risk factors for mortality from ischemic heart disease among elderly women than among elderly men. These differences between genders may be due to selective mortality among middle-aged men and physiological changes in women during menopause.
However, the many observations that conflict with the LDL receptor hypothesis, may be explained by the idea that high serum cholesterol and/or high LDL is protective against infection and atherosclerosis.
http://qjmed.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/con ... eytype=refand most of all, the fact that high cholesterol predicts longevity rather than mortality in old people, suggests that the role, if any, of high cholesterol must be trivial. The most likely explanation for these findings is that rather than promoting atherosclerosis, high cholesterol may be protective, possibly through its beneficial influence on the immune system.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9343498INTERPRETATION: In people older than 85 years, high total cholesterol concentrations are associated with longevity owing to lower mortality from cancer and infection. The effects of cholesterol-lowering therapy have yet to be assessed.
Say what? Are they saying that the continued use of NSAIDs made no difference on the clinical course of their disease? Really? That's mighty hard for me to believe. It certainly runs contrary to the collective experience of the members of this board. I have no doubt that there are probably a few people with MC, who can take NSAIDs, and get away with it, but that certainly doesn't apply to the majority of us, as the article would have us believe.There was a high incidence of arthritis and NSAID use in our population, but there was no relationship between these entities and clinical course or histology.