Nov. 28 -Not Enough ‘Good’ Cholesterol Makes It
Harder to Recover from Stroke
People are at an increased risk of memory problems
and greater disability after stroke if they have low levels
of “good” cholesterol and high levels of homocysteine,
an amino acid acquired mostly from eating meat. The findings
are published in the November 27, 2007, issue of Neurology,
the medical journal of the American
Academy of Neurology.
“These findings show metabolic stress
plays a significant role in stroke recovery,” said study
author George C. Newman, MD, PhD, with Albert Einstein Healthcare
Network in Philadelphia, PA, and member of the American Academy
of Neurology.
The study involved 3,680 men and women over
age 35 in the United States, Canada, and Scotland who had suffered
a mild to moderate stroke within the past three months. The
participants underwent cognitive and disability tests and were
followed for two years.
Researchers found several factors predicted
memory and disability problems after stroke: increased age,
non-Caucasian race, recurrent stroke, diabetes, stroke in the
left hemisphere of the brain, higher levels of homocysteine
and lower levels of high-density lipoproteins (HDL), otherwise
known as “good” cholesterol.
“People with low levels of HDL, high levels
of homocysteine, and diabetes are twice as likely as those without
such problems to have poorer cognitive function and greater
disability after stroke,” said Newman. “The study
also found stroke recovery was the most difficult for people
over the age of 57 with high levels of homocysteine, which is
a risk factor for heart problems and associated with low levels
of vitamin B6, B12, folic acid and kidney disease.”
Source: American Academy of Neurology (AAN)
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