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VA RESEARCHERS WORK ON PARKINSON'S, CHOLESTEROL
PUZZLE -- "This finding gives us one more piece
in the puzzle
about the role of cholesterol in Parkinson's
disease."

For more about VA research, use the VA Watchdog
search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=va+research&op=ph
Story here...
http://03530.com/2008/04/05/piece
s-coming-together-in-parkinsons-cholesterol-puzzle.html
Story below:
-------------------------
Pieces Coming Together In Parkinson’s,
Cholesterol Puzzle
In 2007, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill researchers published
a study that found people with low levels of LDL cholesterol are more
likely to have Parkinson’s disease than people with high LDL levels.
But that study could not answer the question of whether low LDL
(low-density lipoprotein) levels were present in study participants before
they were diagnosed with Parkinson’s, or if they developed low LDL levels
after being diagnosed.
Now a follow-up study led by UNC researchers in collaboration with
colleagues in Virginia, Hawaii and Japan has found that low LDL levels
were present in a group of men of Japanese ancestry long before these men
were diagnosed with Parkinson’s.
“This finding gives us one more piece in the puzzle about the role of
cholesterol in Parkinson’s disease,” said Dr. Xuemei Huang, the study’s
principal investigator. Huang is also medical director of the Movement
Disorder Clinic at UNC Hospitals and an assistant professor of neurology
in the UNC School of Medicine.
“What makes these results especially useful is
the fact that most of the men in this study were not taking
cholesterol-lowering drugs such as statins,” Huang said. “This suggests
that the association between low LDL levels and Parkinson’s exists
independently from statin use, which helps answer another important
question raised by our earlier study.”
The new study was published online this week by the journal Movement
Disorders. Huang is the lead author. Her co-authors include Drs. G.
Webster Ross and Helen Petrovitch, who are both with the Pacific Health
Research Institute, the Veterans Affairs Pacific Islands Health Care
System and the University of Hawaii; Dr. Robert D. Abbott of the
University of Virginia and Shiga University in Japan; and Dr. Richard B.
Mailman, a professor of psychiatry and pharmacology at the UNC School of
Medicine.
Low levels of LDL cholesterol are clearly associated with good
cardiovascular health. Huang’s research adds to a growing literature
indicating that people with low LDL may be at greater risk for developing
Parkinson’s.
“Our study again shows an association between low cholesterol and the risk
of Parkinson’s disease, but we have not shown cause and effect,” Huang
said. “People taking statins for valid medical reasons should not stop
simply to avoid Parkinson’s.”
For this prospective study, fasting lipids were measured from 1991 to 1993
in a group of 3,233 men of Japanese ancestry who took part in a
long-running study called the Honolulu-Asia Aging Study. These data were
collected before statin therapy for lowering cholesterol was widely
available. When followed for about ten years, the incidence of Parkinson’s
disease increased with decreasing levels of LDL cholesterol.
After adjusting their statistical analysis for age, smoking, coffee intake
and other factors, the researchers calculated that the relative odds of
Parkinson’s for men with lower LDL levels (85 milligrams per deciliter)
was about twice that of those with higher LDL levels (135 milligrams per
deciliter). They concluded that this study supports the hypothesis that
low LDL levels are associated with an increased future risk of
Parkinson’s.
Huang said more research is needed to confirm these findings, with logical
next steps including conducting studies with larger sample sizes and that
include women and African-Americans.
The paper on the study, titled “Low LDL cholesterol and increased risk of
Parkinson’s disease: Prospective results from Honolulu-Asia Aging Study,”
can be found at
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/77502481/issue.
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
210 Pittsboro St. Campus Box 6210
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
United States
http://www.unc.edu
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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