Abstract
Clinical observations show that severe illness often leads to hypocholesterolemia. To verify this finding and to define the relationship between serum cholesterol and a patient's prognosis, a study was conducted in two large hospital populations. Of 24,000 and 61,463 adult patients (populations I and II) an average of 3.8% and 3.6% died in hospital, respectively. The mean serum cholesterol levels of patients who died was significantly lower than that of those who survived (163.6 mg/dl versus 217.8 mg/dl;P < 0.0001). The average cholesterol of surviving patients was similar to that of 6,543 healthy controls. During hospitalization serum cholesterol levels of ≤ 100 mg/dl were encountered in 1.2% and 3.6% of patients of populations I and II, respectively. The mortality of these hypocholesterolemic patients was about tenfold higher than average and showed a strong, inverse, linear relationship with serum cholesterol concentrations. Patients whose serum cholesterol level dropped to less than 45 mg/dl did not survive. These data show that in severely ill patients serum cholesterol may decline to very low concentrations, and the prognosis is reflected by the degree of hypocholesterolemia, which thus may serve as a clinically useful prognostic parameter.
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Correspondence to: E. Windler
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Windler, E., Ewers-Grabowl, U., Thiery, J. et al. The prognostic value of hypocholesterolemia in hospitalized patients. Clin Investig 72, 939–943 (1994). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00577732
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00577732