(HealthDay News) -- Methods to gauge blood cholesterol to determine  vascular disease risk can be simplified, researchers in England say.
Their  method measures levels of either total or high-density lipoprotein  (HDL, or "good" cholesterol) in the blood or apolipoproteins (proteins  that help transport cholesterol), without the need to have patients fast  and without regard to another form of blood fat called triglycerides.
"Expert  opinion is divided" on which combination of measurements is ideal in  gauging cardiovascular risk, explained John Danesh, of the Emerging Risk  Factors Collaboration Coordinating Centre at the University of  Cambridge, and colleagues.
In order to examine the association  between major blood fats and apolipoproteins and coronary heart disease  and ischemic stroke, the researchers analyzed data on more than 300,000  people without initial vascular disease who took part in 68 long-term  studies.
During the follow-up periods of the studies, there were  almost 8,900 nonfatal heart attacks, more than 3,900 coronary heart  disease deaths, over 2,500 ischemic strokes, 513 hemorrhagic strokes and  more than 2,500 unclassified strokes, the study authors noted.
The analysis of the data yielded a number of findings. Read more...
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