Low Blood Cholesterol Reduces Heart Disease & Cancer Nov 13, 2009
The recent findings from these studies help ease longstanding fears in individuals that low blood cholesterol is associated with an increased risk of cancer. Scientists noted that these results should help dispel any lingering thoughts that low cholesterol may help increase the risk and cause of cancer. Collected data from one of the studies has followed more than 30,000 Finnish men for more than 18 years which showed both the reason for fears that low cholesterol levels raised the risk of cancer and the reason why those fears were unjustified. Cholesterol levels below the generally recommended 200 mg per deciliter were associated with an 18-20% higher overall risk of cancer, but the increased risk applied only to cases diagnosed in the early years of the study. The findings supported the idea that lower cholesterol ranks are the result of undiagnosed cancers. And the higher levels of HDL cholesterol, the good kind that protects our arteries were associated with a 14-15% lower risk of all cancers over the time of the study.
In addition to that data, more collected information noted that more than 5,000 men enrolled in the clinical trials showed that with blood cholesterol levels lower than 200, 59% of those men had a lower risk of developing the most dangerous form of cancer. Cholesterol levels had no significant effect on the overall incidence of cancer over the length of the study, but the association between low cholesterol levels and a reduced incidence of the disease is a notable reduction, which is not often seen in many cancers.
Research is still being done to determine whether statins, which help prevent heart disease by lowering blood levels of bad, LDL cholesterol, can reduce the risk of cancer. Information has been collected though in detail on cholesterol lowering and cancer reducing efforts, but it is still too premature to read from the trials findings that such efforts actively lower cholesterol levels and help reduce the risk of cancer. Nevertheless, further research is still needed to both prove the scientific point and identify the association.
Staff – Everythingantiaging.com
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