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The enclosed three paragraphs, which I wrote last week for the Weston
A Price Foundation website to add to the "Oiling of America"
article tells how the 200 mg/dl cutoff for serum cholesterol was
decided back in 1984.
Dr Mary Enig
Gary Taubes, a staff writer for Science wrote an article called
"The Soft Science of Dietary Fat" for the 30 March 2001
issue of Science. He had reviewed all the available information
on the demonization of dietary fat and the cholesterol issues and
listened to the tapes of the 1984 Cholesterol Consensus Conference.
He presented the graph which showed quite clearly that serum cholesterol
levels of 200 mg/dl to 240 mg/dl were definitely in the normal cholesterol
range for which there was no increased risk of heart mortality in
males and even above 240 mg/dl there was a decrease in risk for
women.
But what Gary Taubes didn''t know was that there was a political
decision being made on the floor of the NIH (Building 10) Mazur
Auditorium that day in December 1984. The decision would allow the
National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI) to have yet another
even more extensive long-term "trial" to work on. The
NHLBI could not get more money from Congress for more large trials
such as the MRFIT or LRC and they were developing the National Cholesterol
Education Program. With the cutoff number at the lower end of the
normal range (200 mg/dl), they could include all of the healthy
normal citizens in the range that would need treatment with diet,
and since the diet would never work to permanently lower those normal
levels (eg, 200 mg/dl to 240 or 260 mg/dl) to below 200 mg/dl, they
could recommend that all these people should go onto cholesterol-lowering
medications.
The three men who were heading the NHLBI (Cleeman, Lenfant, and
Rifkin) were standing together in the Mazur Auditorium just before
the Cholesterol Consensus Conference began. They were discussing
the cutoff level of serum cholesterol to put into the consensus
report. One said to the other two, "but we can''t have the
cutoff at 240 [mg/dl]; it has to be at 200 [mg/dl] or we won''t
have enough people to test." Several of us from the University
of Maryland Department of Chemistry Lipids Research Group were standing
directly behind them and within clear earshot. We looked at each
other and of course were not surprised when the final numbers came
out. This small chat did not get onto the tapes that Taubes reviewed.
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