This critical integrative review reassesses the lipid paradigm by systematically mapping 380 influential trials and cohort studies on cholesterol, saturated fats, and statins in relation to cardiovascular and cognitive outcomes. The evidence base reveals a nearly even split between studies supporting and challenging LDL-centric causality, alongside pervasive methodological flaws, including reliance on surrogate lipid markers, ecological inferences, residual confounding, and industry-related reporting biases. Trial-generation comparisons and structured risk-of-bias assessment (ROB 2, ROBINS-I) repeatedly show that substantial pharmacological LDL reductions do not consistently yield proportional reductions in myocardial infarction, stroke, or all-cause mortality. Integrating Mendelian randomization with clinical and metabolomic data, the review advances a Critical Window Hypothesis in which LDL is necessary but not sufficient for atherogenesis, exerting dominant causal influence during early and midlife plaque initiation, while inflammatory, oxidative, and hemodynamic factors become primary drivers in advanced disease. Metabolomic studies of extreme longevity and late-life cohorts demonstrate that bile acids, steroid metabolites, and low-glycemic metabolic profiles—not total cholesterol—better predict survival and cognitive preservation, and that higher LDL in the oldest-old often associates with lower mortality and dementia risk. These findings challenge universal LDL-centric policies and support lifestyle medicine strategies prioritizing systemic metabolic optimization over isolated cholesterol targets.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Roberto García Sánchez
Universidad Europea
Samuel Pérez Bravo
Sociedad Española de Medicina Interna
Victoria Soler Anaya
Sociedad Española de Medicina Interna
Universidad de La Laguna
Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental
Sociedad Española de Medicina Interna
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Sánchez et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69b257df96eeacc4fcec6d9a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rjpm4010002