Resources for caregivers, families and those living
with Alzheimer’s…click here for savings and values
from the line of products from Amazon.
Role of cholesterol in Alzheimer's Disease unclear,
reports the 'Harvard Men's Health Watch'
BOSTON, Feb. 23 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- It sounds simple:
The lower your cholesterol, the better your heart
health. But a man's heart and his head don't always
agree. In fact, the relationships among cholesterol
levels, psychological function, and neurologic
disorders are complex and sometimes controversial,
reports the March 2007 issue of Harvard Men's Health
Watch.
There are two major forms of dementia: vascular dementia and
Alzheimer's disease. Vascular dementia results when
blood vessel damage deprives the brain of oxygen.
Brain cells die as a result, and mental function
suffers. Some studies link high cholesterol levels
to an increased risk of cognitive impairment, but
others report the opposite.
More research is needed to sort this out, but even now,
investigations of HDL (good) cholesterol and mental
function have consistently reported that high HDL
levels appear to help preserve mental function in
older people.
The connection between Alzheimer's disease and
cholesterol is even more complex. Scientists have
learned much of the damage of Alzheimer's comes from
deposits of a sticky protein, called beta-amyloid,
in vital areas of the brain. In some studies, high
cholesterol levels appear to accelerate the
formation of beta-amyloid plaques.
People with the genetic trait that increases the level of a
particular cholesterol transport protein have a
greatly increased risk of late-onset Alzheimer's.
The urgent question is whether cholesterol-lowering
drugs, such as statins, can reduce the risk of
Alzheimer's disease. In the most recent studies,
people who took statins did not appear to be at
lower risk for the disease.
Additional research is under way. Right now, it is too early
for firm conclusions on the relationships among
cholesterol, cognitive function, and statin therapy.