Differences in HDL Cholesterol Concentrations in Japanese, American, and Australian Children

Author:

Dwyer Terence1,Iwane Hisao1,Dean Kimberlie1,Odagiri Yuko1,Shimomitsu Teruichi1,Blizzard Leigh1,Srinivasan Sathanur1,Nicklas Theresa1,Wattigney Wendy1,Riley Malcolm1,Berenson Gerald1

Affiliation:

1. From the Menzies Centre for Population Health Research, WHO Collaborating Centre for Population Based Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Programmes, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Australia (T.D., K.D., L.B., M.R.); the Department of Preventive Medicine ardiology (J.M.C.) and Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology (D.F.), Mount Sinai Hospital; Division of C ardiology (J.C.S.) and Department of O College, WHO Collaborating Center for Health Promotion Through Research and Training in Sports Medicine,...

Abstract

BackgroundMortality from coronary heart disease is relatively low in Japan compared with other developed countries and has remained low despite an increasing standard of living and an apparent increase in mean plasma cholesterol concentration in adults over the past three decades. Important differences in childhood plasma lipoprotein profile might contribute to some of the difference in coronary heart disease mortality seen between Japan and both Australia and North America.Methods and ResultsPlasma HDL cholesterol and total cholesterol were surveyed in representative populations of schoolchildren in Australia, Japan, and Bogalusa, La. The mean concentration of plasma HDL cholesterol (but not total cholesterol) was higher for Japanese schoolchildren than for Australian or US schoolchildren (P<.001). In addition, the difference in plasma HDL cholesterol between the ages of 8 to 10 years and 12 to 15 years was much greater for Australian (boys, 15.2%; girls, 2.6%) and US (boys, 9.1%; girls, 2.7%) children than for their Japanese counterparts (boys, 4.2%; girls, 1.9%). An examination of potential explanatory factors revealed little difference in body mass index between samples, higher physical activity levels for the Japanese compared with the Australians, and substantial differences in dietary intake between Japanese and Australian schoolchildren.ConclusionsThe relatively high ratio of plasma HDL cholesterol to total cholesterol in Japanese schoolchildren and the relatively small negative difference of plasma HDL cholesterol with age may help to explain why the coronary heart disease mortality rate in Japan is low compared with that in other developed countries.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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