眼部出现黄色瘤和/或角膜环意味着什么?

标签:
保健黄色瘤角膜环冠心病预测健康 |
分类: 健康要闻 |
基于33年对近13000名年龄在20~93岁的丹麦人之追踪观察,丹麦学者发现眼部出现胆固醇沉积(如黄色瘤、角膜环等)者日后患冠心病,特别是发生心肌梗死之风险较没有上述改变者高。这一结果不仅提示黄色瘤和/或角膜环可视为预测冠心病的有力佐证,亦告诉大家拥有上述改变者需要遵循健康的生活方式,并定期监测血脂和看医生,以预防和/或延缓冠心病,特别是心肌梗死的发生。
Cholesterol Deposits Around Eyes Linked to Heart Risk
Researchers find an association, but don't prove 'cause and effect,' study says
THURSDAY, Sept. 15 (HealthDay News) -- Men and women who develop visible deposits of cholesterol in the skin around their eyelids appear to face a higher risk of heart disease in general and suffering a heart attack in particular, new Danish research suggests.
The link between the skin condition and heart disease, however, is characterized as an association, rather than a clear case of "cause and effect."
Nonetheless, the study team led by Dr. Anne Tybjaerg-Hansen, from the department of clinical biochemistry at Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark, said that the finding could perhaps help physicians screen for heart disease.
And the research, published in the Sept. 15 online edition of the BMJ, "could be of particular value in societies where access to laboratory facilities and thus lipid profile measurement is difficult," the authors said in a journal news release.
Individuals who have the raised yellow patches around the eyes that indicate the collection of cholesterol in the skin -- known as "xanthelasmata" -- are not always easily identified in blood tests as having high cholesterol, the study authors noted.
That said, xanthelasmata and another condition called "arcus corneae" (distinguished by white or grey rings surrounding the cornea) have previously been determined to signal deposits of cholesterol.
To see how such deposits might affect heart disease risk, between 1976 and 2009 the research team surveyed and tracked nearly 13,000 Danish patients aged 20 to 93 who were participating in the Copenhagen City Heart Study.
Although none had heart disease at the time of the study launch, when the investigation began a little more than 4 percent had xanthelasmata, while nearly a quarter had arcus corneae.
Ultimately, more than 1,870 of the participants had a heart attack, and nearly 3,800 developed heart disease. Roughly 1,500 had a stroke and 1,815 developed cerebrovascular disease. All told, just over 8,500 died by the study's conclusion.
By that point, the study team found that having xanthelasmata was independently associated with bearing a higher risk for experiencing a heart attack and developing heart disease. It was also linked to a greater likelihood of dying within a 10-year period.
The finding held regardless of gender, smoking history, obesity and blood pressure/cholesterol levels, with men between the ages of 70 and 79 facing the highest risk.
Arcus corneae, however, was not linked to heart disease or heart attack risk, the researchers reported.
SOURCE: BMJ, news release, Sept. 15,
2011