AUTHOR: Biomed Mom TITLE: Low Cholesterol May Be Related to Impulsivity DATE: 4/13/2007 02:17:00 PM ----- BODY:
Original Article The cholesterol conundrum - low cholesterol levels may lead to impulsive behavior Why do people on low-cholesterol diets die somewhat less often what less often of heart disease, yet a lot more often of suicide, accidents, and homicide than the rest of the population? Although the finding has cropped up in numerous studies over the past decade, it has met with much disbelief in medical circles. Nevertheless, an expert in heart disease research decided to test whether there might be any behavioral basis for the results. His studies link cholesterol in the diet with the neurotransmitter serotonin and its manifestation in impulsive behavior. Jay Kaplan, Ph.D., looked at monkeys who were eating diets high in fat, but either low or high in cholesterol. After eight months, he found that the low-cholesterol monkeys, who had cholesterol readings of about 220, had no heart disease but were more hostile than the monkeys on a cheeseburger-like diet, whose levels hit 600. "These monkeys went at it hammer and tong," says Kaplan, a professor of comparative medicine. "They engaged in more contact aggression - highly charged impulsive fighting - than the other monkeys." Impulsivity, an increasingly scrutinized category of behavior, plays out in violence, suicide, and risk taking. And, impulsive people are likely to have a deficit of serotonin. "People in cholesterol-lowering trials might have been experiencing impulsivity, which led to the higher rates of suicide and accidents," suggests Kaplan. He then measured serotonin levels in the monkeys' cerebrospinal fluid. Sure enough, the low-cholesterol aggressive monkeys had less serotonin than the high-cholesterol monkeys. Cholesterol is a major component of brain-cell membranes. Alterations in dietary cholesterol affect the fluidity and viscosity of the membranes, which house receptors for serotonin. So altering the condition of neuronal membranes may well alter the function of these serotonin receptors, explains Kaplan. The findings, reported in Psychosomatic Medicine (Vol. 56), raise questions about the National Cholesterol Education Program recommendations that Americans over the age of two significantly lower their intake of fat and cholesterol. "Can this diet do harm?" asks Kaplan. "For people who already have low serotonergic activity, a low-cholesterol diet might shove them across some threshold that makes them more likely to do things they might not otherwise do." Or into depression. A recent study of men being treated for heart disease showed that those receiving cholesterol-lowering drugs experienced more symptoms of depression and anxiety than those who were not on the drugs. Kaplan is swimming against a strong current. "The NIH," he laments, "has billions of dollars tied up in the [cholesterol] hypothesis." COPYRIGHT 1995 Sussex Publishers, Inc. COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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Adopt Biomed

This blog gathers information about biomedical interventions for children with adoption trauma and Reactive Attachment Disorder. Posts are gathered from multiple websites in one place. Most posts contain unedited text relating to biomedical treatment, dietary changes, vitamins, homeopathy, herbs, etc. Where possible, the link to the original information is included.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Low Cholesterol May Be Related to Impulsivity

Original Article The cholesterol conundrum - low cholesterol levels may lead to impulsive behavior Why do people on low-cholesterol diets die somewhat less often what less often of heart disease, yet a lot more often of suicide, accidents, and homicide than the rest of the population? Although the finding has cropped up in numerous studies over the past decade, it has met with much disbelief in medical circles. Nevertheless, an expert in heart disease research decided to test whether there might be any behavioral basis for the results. His studies link cholesterol in the diet with the neurotransmitter serotonin and its manifestation in impulsive behavior. Jay Kaplan, Ph.D., looked at monkeys who were eating diets high in fat, but either low or high in cholesterol. After eight months, he found that the low-cholesterol monkeys, who had cholesterol readings of about 220, had no heart disease but were more hostile than the monkeys on a cheeseburger-like diet, whose levels hit 600. "These monkeys went at it hammer and tong," says Kaplan, a professor of comparative medicine. "They engaged in more contact aggression - highly charged impulsive fighting - than the other monkeys." Impulsivity, an increasingly scrutinized category of behavior, plays out in violence, suicide, and risk taking. And, impulsive people are likely to have a deficit of serotonin. "People in cholesterol-lowering trials might have been experiencing impulsivity, which led to the higher rates of suicide and accidents," suggests Kaplan. He then measured serotonin levels in the monkeys' cerebrospinal fluid. Sure enough, the low-cholesterol aggressive monkeys had less serotonin than the high-cholesterol monkeys. Cholesterol is a major component of brain-cell membranes. Alterations in dietary cholesterol affect the fluidity and viscosity of the membranes, which house receptors for serotonin. So altering the condition of neuronal membranes may well alter the function of these serotonin receptors, explains Kaplan. The findings, reported in Psychosomatic Medicine (Vol. 56), raise questions about the National Cholesterol Education Program recommendations that Americans over the age of two significantly lower their intake of fat and cholesterol. "Can this diet do harm?" asks Kaplan. "For people who already have low serotonergic activity, a low-cholesterol diet might shove them across some threshold that makes them more likely to do things they might not otherwise do." Or into depression. A recent study of men being treated for heart disease showed that those receiving cholesterol-lowering drugs experienced more symptoms of depression and anxiety than those who were not on the drugs. Kaplan is swimming against a strong current. "The NIH," he laments, "has billions of dollars tied up in the [cholesterol] hypothesis." COPYRIGHT 1995 Sussex Publishers, Inc. COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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