Abstract

We investigated the seasonal variation in high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) in 142 dyslipidemic (non-HDL-cholesterol ≥ 5.2 mmol/1) middle-aged men in the placebo group of the Helsinki Heart Study over the 5-year trial period. A seasonal pattern was found in HDL fluctuation, with a 4.5% drop during mid-winter (5-year mean 1.192 ± 0.265 mmol/1) compared with a stable level (5-year mean 1.248 ± 0.281 mmol/1) during the rest of the year ( P < 0.001). A less pronounced seasonal variation in HDL was observed in 85 subjects receiving gemfibrozil. Although affecting pretrial HDL level in cross-sectional analyses, age, alcohol consumption, dietary adherence, physical activity and serum triglycerides had no influence on the seasonality of HDL variation. Smoking had a slight attenuating effect on the variation pattern. Pretrial HDL was influenced by relative weight, but there was also an inverse relationship between HDL and body weight variations, i.e. the annual drop in HDL coincided with the annual peak in body weight. However, seasonal HDL variation was not directly reflected in the annual variation in CHD incidence.

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