Despite great interest in the role of lipids in overall and disease-free survival, virtually no information is available on the lipids, lipoproteins and apolipoproteins of persons over 90 years of age. Furthermore, the genetic underpinnings of atherosclerosis and the particular genetic factors responsible for protection against coronary artery disease remain speculative. In Bloomfield, Nebraska, we studied 41 nonagenarians (10 males, 31 females), with a mean age of 92.7 years, in whom lipids, lipoproteins, apolipoproteins and restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) of genes for apolipoprotein B (apo B), aop AI and apo CIII were assessed. Nearly complete historical, physical and laboratory data were obtained on 39 subjects. The mean diastolic and systolic blood pressures for this group were nonhypertensive, body mass indices (weight/height2) had a mean of 23.9 and triceps skinfold thickness measurements an overall mean of 14.8 mm. The mean total serum cholesterol was 5.42 mmol/l. HDL-cholesterol levels in females persisted to be higher when compared to males (P less than 0.013). The allele frequencies for apo AI (MspI and PstI), apo CIII (Sst) and apo B (XbaI) gene RFLPs were typical for larger population studies. In these preliminary studies, we did not identify a distinctive phenotype, genotype, or phenotype-genotype relationship. Diversity of cardiovascular risk was the hallmark of these nonagenarians.