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Stress may raise cholesterol in
some
New York -
For some people, the body's reaction to stress may raise the
odds of developing high cholesterol, the results of a new study
suggest.
Researchers in the UK found that
healthy middle-age adults whose cholesterol rose in response to a
stressful task were more likely than their peers without this increase
to have high cholesterol several years later.
It's been known that blood
cholesterol can show a short-lived rise in response to stress, study
co-author Dr. Andrew Steptoe told Reuters Health. The new findings, he
said, suggest that these transient increases may predict long-term
elevations in cholesterol.
A number of studies have linked
chronic stress to a higher risk of heart disease, and it's possible
that stress-related changes in cholesterol contribute to this,
according to Steptoe, who is based at University College London.
Steptoe and colleague Lena Brydon
report the findings in the journal Health Psychology.
To see if stress-related spikes in
cholesterol can have long-range effects, the researchers followed 199
middle-aged adults over 3 years. At the start of the study,
participants performed two moderately stressful computer-based tasks;
blood samples were taken before and after the tests to measure any
changes in cholesterol levels. The men and women were then divided
into three groups based on the extent of their cholesterol response.
Three years later, participants had
their blood cholesterol measured again. Those in the group with the
greatest cholesterol response to stress were the most likely to have
high cholesterol.
Overall, 56 percent had a total
cholesterol level that surpassed the cutoff for diagnosing high
cholesterol, compared with only 16 percent of the group whose
cholesterol levels had been least affected by stress.
Even when the researchers weighed
other factors such as age, body weight and smoking, the group with the
highest stress response was 13 times more likely than the group with
the lowest response to have high cholesterol 3 years later.
They were also four times more likely
to have high levels of LDL cholesterol, the "bad" form that
contributes to artery-clogging plaques.
The findings suggest that chronic
stress can contribute to high cholesterol in some people, though the
reason is unclear, according to Steptoe and Brydon.
One possibility, they note, is that
changes in metabolism in response to stress ultimately cause the liver
to boost production of LDL particles. There is also evidence that
stress can temporarily limit the body's clearance of cholesterol from
the blood.
According to Steptoe, it's possible
that such effects could be modified if people changed their conscious
reactions to stress.
Stress management, he noted, has been
shown to lower levels of the stress hormones cortisol and epinephrine.
Steptoe said he is not aware of any studies that have tested whether
the same is true of cholesterol levels. --
Reuters
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