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Coronary heart disease, hypercholesterolemia,
and atherosclerosis. I. False premises.
Stehbens WE. Department of Pathology and Molecular Medicine,
Wellington School of Medicine, Wellington, New Zealand.
Lipid-rich caseous debris of advanced lesions stimulated interest
in the role of cholesterol and lipids in atherosclerosis. Lipid-containing
arterial lesions in cholesterol-overfed animals (cholesterolosis)
and xanthomatous vascular lesions in subjects with familial hypercholesterolemia
were then misrepresented as being atherosclerotic and led to the
development of the hypercholesterolemic/lipid hypothesis. It is
untenable that cholesterol, an essential multifunctional metabolite,
is pathogenic at all blood levels and hypercholesterolemia is not
prerequisite for human or experimental atherosclerosis. Serum cholesterol
levels display a poor correlation with atherosclerosis at autopsy
and with unreliable national coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality
in each sex.
Atherosclerosis topography and its iatrogenic production in humans
and experimentally in herbivores by hemodynamic means both support
a biomechanical causation and preclude causality by any circulating
humoral factor. CHD, not a specific disease, is a nonspecific complication
of many diseases including atherosclerosis and cannot be equated
with coronary atherosclerosis due to differences in pathology and
pathogenesis. Thus, extrapolations from CHD risk factors or correlations
with fallacious vital statistics to atherosclerosis are invalid.
It follows that the hypercholesterolemic/lipid hypothesis evolving
from false premises, misuse of CHD, scientific misrepresentation,
and fallacious data has no legitimate basis.
Copyright 2001 Academic Press
PMID: 11263954 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
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