Blood cholesterol and coronary heart disease: changing perspectives
Abstract
There has been much controversy concerning the
value of efforts to reduce blood cholesterol levels.
In this contribution, the risks and benefits of
interventions are discussed. Lowering cholesterol
level by drugs is not recommended except in a small
minority of subjects at very high risk of coronary
heart disease (CHD), since it causes an excess of non-
CHD deaths. Dietary intervention, by contrast, is safe.
However, for it to be effective it must be sufficiently
vigorous to achieve a drop in blood cholesterol of at
least 6%, though considerably more is preferable. This
action should be part of a more general effort aimed
at the prevention of all Western diseases based on
changes in lifestyle.