On 2015 Feb 18, David Keller commented:
Should Parkinson patients with low LDL cholesterol increase dietary cholesterol intake?
Patients with Parkinson Disease (PD) tend to have lower LDL and total cholesterol levels than matched subjects without PD (and concomitantly lower rates of cardiovascular atherosclerotic diseases). The association of elevated cholesterol levels with reduced risk for PD incidence suggests that PD patients with abnormally low LDL and total cholesterol levels may benefit by elevating these lipid levels into the normal range, perhaps by consuming more dietary saturated fat or cholesterol itself. Of course, increasing LDL levels would also tend to increase cardiovascular risk; if increasing LDL by diet is found to slow down PD progression, then each PD patient will have to decide how much cardiovascular risk increase they are willing to accept in exchange for the concomitant neurological benefits. A randomized trial of atherogenic diet in PD patients would require careful attention to fully-informed consent, and should not raise the cardiovascular risk profile of any subject higher than the age-adjusted lower limit of normal for that patient.
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