Serum cholesterol levels and six-year mortality from stroke in 350,977 men screened for the multiple risk factor intervention trial.

We examined the relation between the serum total cholesterol level and the risk of death from stroke during six years of follow-up in 350,977 men, 35 to 57 years of age, who had no history of heart attack and were not currently being treated for diabetes mellitus. The diagnosis of stroke and the type of stroke were obtained from death certificates. Using proportional-hazards regression to control for age, cigarette smoking, diastolic blood pressure, and race or ethnic group, we found that the six-year risk of death from intracranial hemorrhage (International Classification of Diseases, ninth edition [ICD-9], categories 431 and 432) was three times higher in men with serum cholesterol levels under 4.14 mmol per liter (160 mg per deciliter) than in those with higher cholesterol levels (P = 0.05 by omnibus test across five cholesterol levels). On the other hand, a positive association was observed between the serum cholesterol level and death from nonhemorrhagic stroke (P = 0.007). The inverse association of the serum cholesterol level with the risk of death from intracranial hemorrhage was confined to men with diastolic blood pressure greater than or equal to 90 mm Hg, in whom death from intracranial hemorrhage is relatively common. We conclude that there is an inverse relation between the serum cholesterol level and the risk of death from hemorrhagic stroke in middle-aged American men, but that its public health impact is overwhelmed by the positive association of higher serum cholesterol levels with death from nonhemorrhagic stroke and total cardiovascular disease (ICD-9 categories 390 through 459).

[1]  J. Cutler,et al.  Serum cholesterol levels and cancer mortality in 361,662 men screened for the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial. , 1987, JAMA.

[2]  J. Neaton,et al.  Is relationship between serum cholesterol and risk of premature death from coronary heart disease continuous and graded? Findings in 356,222 primary screenees of the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT). , 1986, JAMA.

[3]  L. Kuller,et al.  SERUM CHOLESTEROL, BLOOD PRESSURE, AND MORTALITY: IMPLICATIONS FROM A COHORT OF 361 662 MEN , 1986, The Lancet.

[4]  A. G. Duchene,et al.  Quality control of biochemical data in the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial: Central Laboratory. , 1986, Controlled clinical trials.

[5]  D. Reed,et al.  Alcohol and hemorrhagic stroke. The Honolulu Heart Program. , 1986, JAMA.

[6]  C. Lenfant A new challenge for America: the National Cholesterol Education Program. , 1986, Circulation.

[7]  K. Yano,et al.  Dietary and other risk factors for stroke in Hawaiian Japanese men. , 1985, Stroke.

[8]  A. Folsom,et al.  Acute stroke in a metropolitan area, 1970 and 1980. The Minnesota Heart Survey. , 1985, Journal of chronic diseases.

[9]  L. Kuller,et al.  Total and cardiovascular mortality in relation to cigarette smoking, serum cholesterol concentration, and diastolic blood pressure among black and white males followed up for five years. , 1984, American heart journal.

[10]  H. Kato,et al.  Cerebrovascular Diseases in a Fixed Population of 653 Hiroshima and Nagasaki, With Special Reference to Relationship Between Type and Risk Factors , 1984, Stroke.

[11]  A. V. Peterson,et al.  Serum cholesterol, other risk factors, and cardiovascular disease in a Japanese cohort. , 1984, Journal of chronic diseases.

[12]  J. Neaton,et al.  An evaluation of the Social Security Administration master beneficiary record file and the National Death Index in the ascertainment of vital status. , 1983, American journal of public health.

[13]  P. Wolf,et al.  Accuracy of death certification of stroke: the Framingham Study. , 1982, Stroke.

[14]  W. Harris,et al.  Polyunsaturated fatty acids, hyperlipidemia, and thrombosis. , 1982, Arteriosclerosis.

[15]  C. Date,et al.  Risk factors for cerebral hemorrhage and cerebral infarction in a Japanese rural community. , 1982, Stroke.

[16]  H. Thomas,et al.  The multiple risk factor intervention trial (MRFIT) II. The development of the protocol. , 1981, Preventive medicine.

[17]  H. Ueshima,et al.  Multivariate analysis of risk factors for stroke. Eight-year follow-up study of farming villages in Akita, Japan. , 1980, Preventive medicine.

[18]  J. Popper,et al.  Factors Related to Stroke Incidence in Hawaii Japanese Men: The Honolulu Heart Study , 1980, Stroke.

[19]  R. Wissler Conference on the Health Effects of Blood Lipids: Optimal Distributions for Populations. Workshop Report: Laboratory-Experimental Section. American Health Foundation, April 11 and 12, 1979. , 1979, Preventive medicine.

[20]  N. Kimura,et al.  (2) The 15 Year Follow-Up Population Survey on Cerebrovascular Disease in Rural Kyushu, Japan , 1977 .

[21]  R. W. Russell HOW DOES BLOOD-PRESSURE CAUSE STROKE? , 1975, The Lancet.

[22]  P. Majerus,et al.  The mechanism of the effect of aspirin on human platelets. I. Acetylation of a particulate fraction protein. , 1975, The Journal of clinical investigation.

[23]  H. Tufo,et al.  Epidemiology of stroke in an elderly welfare population. , 1974, American journal of public health.

[24]  R. Ostwald,et al.  Erythrocyte membranes--effect of increased cholesterol content on permeability. , 1971, Biochimica et biophysica acta.

[25]  A. Heyman,et al.  Cerebrovascular disease in the biracial population of Evans County, Georgia. , 1971, Archives of internal medicine.

[26]  Roger Williams,et al.  Methods and Devices: IMPROVED LIVER-BIOPSY NEEDLE , 1969 .

[27]  J. Gier,et al.  The effect of partial replacements of membrane cholesterol by other steroids on the osmotic fragility and glycerol permeability of erythrocytes. , 1969, Biochimica et biophysica acta.

[28]  R. Acheson,et al.  A study of the validity of the diagnosis of stroke in mortality data. II. Comparison by computer of autopsy and clinical records with death certificates. , 1969, American journal of epidemiology.

[29]  L. Kuller Cerebrovascular disease mortality among Baltimore residents aged 20-64. , 1967, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[30]  L. Kuller,et al.  Analysis of the validity of cerebrovascular disease mortality statistics in Maryland. , 1967, Journal of chronic diseases.

[31]  P. Yates,et al.  The occurrence and significance of intracerebral micro-aneurysms. , 1967, The Journal of pathology and bacteriology.

[32]  W. Kannel,et al.  VASCULAR DISEASE OF THE BRAIN--EPIDEMIOLOGIC ASPECTS: THE FARMINGHAM STUDY. , 1965, American journal of public health and the nation's health.

[33]  S. D. Mohamed,et al.  Abnormal histidine metabolism in thyrotoxicosis in man. A possible index of impaired folate function. , 1965, Lancet.

[34]  F. D. Norris,et al.  A study of multiple causes of death in California. , 1962, Journal of chronic diseases.