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High cholesterol may raise blood
pressure-study
Washington -
People with high cholesterol also have a greater risk of high
blood pressure, U.S. researchers reported on Monday in one of the
first studies to demonstrate that one may cause the other.
A study of 3,000 men monitored for 14
years showed that those who developed the unhealthiest cholesterol
levels raised their risk of hypertension by 39 percent.
"There appears to be a significant
association between increased cholesterol levels and the risk of
developing hypertension in healthy, middle-aged men," said Howard
Sesso, an epidemiologist at Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard
Medical School in Boston.
"We looked at this same exact
question in a study published a month ago ... in women. We found the
same thing," Sesso said in a telephone interview.
While both conditions lead to heart
disease, the No. 1 killer of Americans and people in many other
developed nations, Sesso said few researchers had looked at whether
high cholesterol could actually cause high blood pressure.
He believes that the damage
cholesterol causes to the walls of arteries makes them less elastic,
leading to high blood pressure. "Our findings suggest we may have a
new means of preventing hypertension, a devastating public heath issue
in this country," he said.
As many as 90 percent of U.S. adults
with normal blood pressure at age 55 may develop hypertension in their
lifetime, according to the American Heart Association.
Unhealthy blood cholesterol is
trickier to calculate as it involves several different readings --
high total cholesterol, high levels of low density lipoprotein or
"bad" cholesterol and low levels of high density lipoprotein or "good"
cholesterol.
But the American Heart Association
says nearly 107 million American adults have total blood cholesterol
values of more than 200, considered the highest desirable level.
The risk factors for high blood
pressure and high cholesterol are similar -- a diet rich in fat, low
in whole grains, fruits and vegetables and a lack of exercise.
Sesso's
team started with more than 3,000 men taking part in a larger study
called the Physician's Health Study. At the beginning all had healthy
blood pressure and cholesterol levels.
Over the average of 14 years of
follow-up, a third of the men developed high blood pressure, the
researchers reported in the latest issue of the journal Hypertension.
Men with the worst levels of bad
cholesterol had a 54 percent higher risk of high blood pressure
compared to the mean with the healthiest levels.
Men with the highest levels of total
cholesterol were 23 percent more likely to develop hypertension than
men with the lowest levels. But men with the highest HDL or "good"
cholesterol levels had a 32 percent lower risk of high blood pressure
than those with the lowest HDL levels.
A second study, published in the
journal Circulation, showed total cholesterol levels have decreased in
middle-aged to older adults but are rising among younger adults.
A survey of 5,000 adults in
Minnesota, ongoing for 20 years, showed that drugs may be responsible.
"The older age groups use more
lipid-lowering drugs. This may be partially responsible for the
continued reduction of their total cholesterol," said Donna Arnett of
the University of Alabama at Birmingham, who led the study. --
Reuters
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