Japanese stroke clues: are there risks to low cholesterol?

Science News, April 22, 1989 by Kathy A. Fackelmann

Japanese Stroke Clues

In Tokyo, you may find an American hamburger more easily than the traditional Japanese repast of fish and rice. Even in rural areas, the Japanese have replaced low-fat foods with red meat, dairy products and eggs. Their fatty diet has led to higher blood levels of cholesterol, a key risk factor for heart attacks and for strokes caused by blood clots.

New research, however, suggests an ironic twist on that trend. A long-term Japanese study, corroborated by U.S. reports, now indicates that people with extremely low blood cholesterol levels may be at increased risk of an even more lethal type of stroke -- cerebral hemorrhage, caused when a brain artery bursts.

The Japanese study, described in the March CIRCULATION, supports a long-standing contention by Japanese researchers that a Western-type diet protects against cerebral hemorrhage. For years, U.S. scientists have disputed Japanese claims about this cholesterol benefit. But the recent studies have spurred U.S. scientists to take a closer look at the link between low cholesterol and hemorrhagic stroke, which strikes an estimated 50,000 Americans each year, killing about half its victims.

Takashi Shimamoto of the University of Tsukuba and colleagues conducted a 20-year disease-surveillance and population survey of Ikawa Town, a farming community 250 miles north of Tokyo. During the study period, from 1963 to 1983, the vestiges of a traditional rural lifestyle were replaced by a more urban existence. Rice farmers mechanized their operations, home refrigerators became more common, and cholesterol levels rose as the spartan Japanese diet gave way to meals laden with animal fat.

The two-decade span witnessed a dramatic decline in all types of stroke, including cerebral hemorrhage. For Ikawa Town men aged 40 to 69, the incidence of all stroke declined 61 percent. For women in the same age range, the incidence dropped 60 percent. Cerebral hemorrhage cases fell 65 percent for males and 94 percent for females, the researchers report.

Lowered blood pressure among Ikawa Town residents accounts for much of the decline in stroke incidence, the researchers say. They attribute the blood presure decline to intensified treatment programs for hypertension and to dietary changes such as lower salt intake, a trend made possible when families began preserving their food through refrigeration rather than salting. Hypertension adds to the risk of stroke by straining blood vessels, increasing the likelihood of clot formation or cerebral hemorrhage.

But hypertension may not act alone in boosting a person's risk of cerebral hemorrhage, the study suggests. The Japanese team looked at 2,257 Ikawa Town residents from 1963 to 1973 and discovered an inverse relationship between cholesterol levels and risk of cerebral hemorrhage. They found more cerebral hemorrhage cases among the men and women who had the lowest cholesterol levels -- those with cholesterol levels below the mean of 178 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl) for men and 190 mg/dl for women. A second study of 2,711 residents followed from 1972 to 1983 showed no relationship between low cholesterol and stroke, a finding the researchers ascribe to the low incidence of stroke during that time.

Shimamoto's group suggests a mechanism to explain how low blood cholesterol increases the risk of cerebral hemorrhage. Because cholesterol plays a vital role in maintaining cell membranes, they say, a lack of cholesterol could lead to weak artery walls prone to rupture, especially when under high pressure.

Supportive evidence in the Western world comes from a six-year U.S. study of 350,977 black and white middle-aged men enrolled in the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT).

Researchers reported the first MRFIT findings in 1982. In a new analysis of MRFIT data reported in the April 6 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, scientists found a sixfold greater threat of death from cerebral hemorrhage in middleaged American men with total serum cholesterol levels lower than 160 mg/dl and elevated blood pressure above 90 mm mercury diastolic. The inverse relationship between cholesterol and hemorrhage disappeared for people with normal blood pressure and for those with cholesterol levels above 160 mg/dl. The study was led by Hiroyasu Iso of The Center for Adult Disease in Osaka, Japan, working at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis with David R. Jacobs Jr. and colleagues. Iso was also a coauthor of the Ikawa Town study.

Data from the Honolulu Heart Program fortify the link between low cholesterol and cerebral hemorrhage, says program director Dwayne M. Reed of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. Starting in 1965, Reed and his colleagues studied 7,850 American men of Japanese descent for 19 years. The yet-unpublished results, he says, show that men with cholesterol levels below 190 mg/dl had more than twice the risk of cerebral hemorrhage compared with men with cholesterol levels above 190 mg/dl. Men with cholesterol levels below 150 mg/dl had four times the risk of this type of stroke compared with men with cholesterol levels above 190 mg/dl, Reed reports.

 

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