Golomb B A
University of California, Los Angeles, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 1998 Mar 15;128(6):478-87. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-128-6-199803150-00009.
To determine whether the seeming relation between low or lowered cholesterol levels and violence is consistent with causality according to Hill's criteria and whether construct validity is supported by convergence of findings across different types of studies.
Search of the MEDLINE database for English-language articles published between 1965 and 1995 was supplemented by searches of the PsycINFO and Current Contents databases and bibliographies of relevant articles.
Peer-reviewed observational and experimental articles and meta-analyses that presented original research; related cholesterol levels to behaviorally defined violence; and, if experimental, had single-factor (lipid-only) intervention.
Studies were grouped according to type. Data on the relation of violence to cholesterol levels from each study were recorded.
Observational studies (including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies) consistently showed increased violent death and violent behaviors in persons with low cholesterol levels. Some meta-analyses of randomized trials found excess violent deaths in men without heart disease who were randomly assigned to receive cholesterol-lowering therapy. Experimental studies showed increased violent behaviors in monkeys assigned to low-cholesterol diets. Human and animal research indicates that low or lowered cholesterol levels may reduce central serotonin activity, which in turn is causally linked to violent behaviors. Many trials support a significant relation between low or lowered cholesterol levels and violence (P < 0.001).
A significant association between low or lowered cholesterol levels and violence is found across many types of studies. Data on this association conform to Hill's criteria for a causal association. Concerns about increased risk for violent outcomes should figure in risk-benefit analyses for cholesterol screening and treatment.
根据希尔标准确定低胆固醇水平或胆固醇水平降低与暴力行为之间表面上的关系是否符合因果关系,以及不同类型研究结果的趋同是否支持结构效度。
检索MEDLINE数据库中1965年至1995年间发表的英文文章,并补充检索PsycINFO和《现刊目次》数据库以及相关文章的参考文献。
同行评审的观察性和实验性文章以及进行原始研究的荟萃分析;将胆固醇水平与行为学定义的暴力行为相关联;如果是实验性研究,则采用单因素(仅脂质)干预。
研究按类型分组。记录每项研究中暴力行为与胆固醇水平关系的数据。
观察性研究(包括队列研究、病例对照研究和横断面研究)一致表明,胆固醇水平低的人暴力死亡和暴力行为增加。一些随机试验的荟萃分析发现,随机分配接受降胆固醇治疗的无心脏病男性暴力死亡过多。实验研究表明,喂食低胆固醇饮食的猴子暴力行为增加。人类和动物研究表明,低胆固醇水平或胆固醇水平降低可能会降低中枢5-羟色胺活性,而这又与暴力行为存在因果关系。许多试验支持低胆固醇水平或胆固醇水平降低与暴力行为之间存在显著关联(P<0.001)。
在多种类型的研究中均发现低胆固醇水平或胆固醇水平降低与暴力行为之间存在显著关联。关于这种关联的数据符合希尔因果关联标准。在胆固醇筛查和治疗的风险效益分析中,应考虑暴力后果风险增加的问题。