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Yellow Blobs on Eyelids Tied to Heart Risk

Friday, September 16, 2011 1:01 PM

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Those raised yellow patches around the eyes and eyelids that some people get may be more than unsightly. A new study has found they are a good predictor of heart disease, heart attack, and death.

The patches, called xanthelasma, contain cholesterol. In a study recently published in the British Medical Journal, men between the ages of 70 and 79 with xanthelasma had a 12 percent greater risk of heart disease than men without them, msnbc.com reports. Women of the same age had an 8 percent higher risk.

The findings were based on a survey of 12,745 people participating in the Copenhagen City Heart Study over a period of 33 years. Danish researchers discovered that people with xanthelasma have a higher risk of heart disease and dying from a heart attack regardless of their cholesterol levels.

The findings are significant because the yellow patches are mainly treated as a cosmetic problem, with patients seeking dermatologists to remove them.

“Some of these people may not have been managed according to their increased risk of cardiovascular disease,” the authors wrote.

To read the complete msnbc.com story, Go Here.

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