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Hyperlipoproteinemia impairs endothelium-dependent vasodilation.

Authors :
Kraml P
Syrovátka P
Stípek S
Fialová L
Koprivová H
Potocková J
Andel M
Source :
Physiological research [Physiol Res] 2004; Vol. 53 (5), pp. 471-80.
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Atherogenic lipoproteins can cause endothelial dysfunction in the initial stage of atherogenesis. In our study we examined 134 patients with defined hyperlipoproteinemia (non-HDL cholesterol>4.1 mmol/l or triglycerides>2.5 mmol/l or taking any of lipid lowering drugs)--94 men and 40 women. The subgroup of controls of comparable age contained 54 normolipidemic individuals--30 men and 24 women. Patients with hyperlipoproteinemia revealed significantly lower ability of endothelium-dependent flow-mediated vasodilation (EDV) measured on brachial artery (4.13+/-3.07 vs. 5.41+/-3.82 %; p=0.032) and higher carotid intima media thickness than normolipidemic controls (0.68+/-0.22 vs. 0.58+/-0.15 mm; p=0.005). In regression analysis, EDV correlated significantly with plasma concentrations of oxLDL (p<0.05) HDL-cholesterol (p<0.05), Apo A1 (p<0.05), ATI (p<0.01) and non-HDL cholesterol (p<0.05). Patients with hyperlipoproteinemia showed higher plasma levels of oxLDL (65.77+/-9.54 vs. 56.49+/-7.80 U/l; p=0.015), malondialdehyde (0.89+/-0.09 vs. 0.73+/-0.08 micromol/l; p=0.010) and nitrites/nitrates (20.42+/-4.88 vs. 16.37+/-4.44 micromol/l; p=0.018) indicating possible higher long-term oxidative stress in these patients.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0862-8408
Volume :
53
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physiological research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15479124