Circulation, Vol 60, 486-489, Copyright © 1979 by American Heart Association
CH Hennekens, DA Evans, WP Castelli, JO Taylor, B Rosner and EH Kass
Fasting plasma triglyceride, plasma cholesterol and high-density
lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol levels were studied for 190 white women, ages
21--39 years, who were classified according to their oral contraceptive
(OC) usage patterns at two community surveys, 3 years apart. The mean level
of fasting triglyceride was higher among current OC users (95 mg/100 ml)
than among nonusers (73 mg/100 ml) (p = 0.002). After adjustment for the
possible confounding effects of age, weight, current cigarette smoking and
fasting glucose level, current OC users still had a mean plasma
triglyceride level 19 mg/100 ml higher than that of nonusers (p = 0.007).
Current OC users also appeared to have somewhat higher levels of total
cholesterol which were of borderline significance in crude and adjusted
analyses. There was a nonsignificant inverse relationship of OC use with
HDL cholesterol levels. Past use did not affect these results, indicating
that the OC-induced lipid changes were reversible.
ARTICLES
Oral contraceptive use and fasting triglyceride, plasma cholesterol and HDL cholesterol
This article has been cited by other articles:
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S. M. Vaziri, J. C. Evans, M. G. Larson, and P. W. F. Wilson The Impact of Female Hormone Usage on the Lipid Profile: The Framingham Offspring Study Arch Intern Med, October 11, 1993; 153(19): 2200 - 2206. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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