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Query: UMLS:C0004153 (
atherosclerosis
)
77,401
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A man and his three daughters had massive corneal opacities called in their home village "fish-eye disease" because of the resemblance of the eyes to those of boiled fish. The two living daughters had the same dyslipoproteinaemia, characterised by normal serum cholesterol but raised serum triglycerides, raised very-low-density lipoproteins, strikingly high levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) triglycerides. LDL contained normal sized as well as abnormally large particles and a 90% reduction in the level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol.
Lecithin
:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity and the percentage of plasma cholesterol esters were normal, with excluded LCAT-deficiency. Normal electrophoretic mobility of HDL as well as other lipoprotein findings excluded Tangier disease. The clinical and laboratory abnormalities in fish-eye disease are
atherosclerosis
at old age, visual impairment, and dense corneal opacification. Fish-eye disease thus differs both clinically and in its lipoprotein abnormalities from LCAT-deficiency and Tangier disease.
...
PMID:Fish-eye disease. A new familial condition with massive corneal opacities and dyslipoproteinaemia. 9 Oct 22
(1) Lipoproteins from the serum of male turkeys maintained on a normal diet were separated by sequential preparative ultracentrifugation into VLDL (d less than 1.006 g/ml), LDL (d = 1.006-1.063 g/ml), HDL (d = 1.063-1.21 g/ml) and VHDL (d greater than 1.21 g/ml). Lipoprotein density classes were characterized by analytical ultracentrifugation, agarose electrophoresis, immunodiffusion and immunoelectrophoresis, and by quantitative determination of protein, lipids and individual phosphatides. (2) HDL were the major density class representing 75% of the total lipoprotein content, LDL accounted for approximately 20% and VLDL for only 3-5% of the total lipoproteins. (3) VLDL were characterized by a relatively low content of glyceride (34%). Cholesterol esters were the major lipid (38%) of LDL, and the phospholipids (26%) of HDL. Glycerides of all major density classes consisted of equal amounts of triglycerides and diglycerides. (4)
Phosphatidylcholine
was the major phosphatide in all density classes. The composition of phosphatides was very similar in the VLDL and LDL, but it was different in the HDL. The ratio of phosphatidylcholine/sphingomyelin was higher in HDL than in VLDL and LD. (5) Immunological and electrophoretic studies showed that all three major density classes consisted of two lipoprotein families designated, in analogy to the human serum lipoprotein system [1], as LP-A and LP-B. The exception was HDL3 (d = 1.125-1.21 g/ml) which contained only LP-A. (6) ApoB was insoluble in aqueous buffers but could be solubilized after reduction and carboxymethylation. No C- or N-terminal amino acids were released by the usual chemical methods. The carbohydrate moiety of ApoB contained mannose, galactose and galactosamine. (7) ApoA consisted of a non-identical polypeptides designated in analogy to the human polypeptides as A-I and A-II. A-I was the major ApoA polypeptide and had a molecular weight of about 27,000. This polypeptide contained no half cystine, and the aspartic acid as the N-terminal and alanine as the C-terminal amino acids. A-II had a molecular weight of about 10,000, contained no half cystine and had alanine as the C-terminal amino acid. A-II showed no N-terminal amino acid by either dansylation, dinitrophenylation or Edman's procedure. Neither A-I nor A-II contained neutral sugars or hexosamines. (8) Concentrations of polypetides analogous to human ApoC, ApoD and "arginine-rich" polypeptide, if present, were too low for their unequivocal chemical characterization.
Atherosclerosis
PMID:Lipid transport in the avian species. Part I. Isolation and characterization of apolipoproteins and major lipoprotein density classes of male turkey serum. 18 83
Lecithin
: cholesterol acyl transfer (LCAT) and relative fatty acid composition of serum lecithin and cholesterol esters were studied in 20 young male survivors of myocardial infarction (MI). Comparisons were made with controls matched for serum cholesterol. There was no difference in LCAT rate between MI patients and controls. The relative content of arachidonic acid in cholesterol esters was higher in MI patients. The fatty acid composition of lecithin and cholesterol esters suggests an equal transfer of linoleic and oleic acids from lecithin to cholesterol. Furthermore negative correlations were found between LCAT and linoleic acid content of lecithin (r = --0.43, P less than 0.01) and cholesterol esters (r = --0.45, P less than 0.01). This inverse relationship does not seem to be linked to substrate specificity, but rather to be mediated by influences in common on serum lipid content and turnover.
Atherosclerosis
1979 May
PMID:Lecithin : cholesterol acyl transfer (LACT) and fatty acid composition of lecithin and cholesterol esters in young male myocardial infarction survivors. 22 97
Lecithin
:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity, lipid concentration, lipoprotein lipid concentrations and cholesteryl ester linoleic acid proportion were determined in the plasma of 85 subjects randomly selected from a population during a health screen survey. Mean fractional LCAT rate was significantly higher in men than in women. Molar LCAT rate correlated with low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol concentration in men and with nearly all lipoprotein lipid concentrations in women. Most of these relationships were dependent on plasma unesterified cholesterol (UC) concentration. Fractional LCAT rate was correlated only with HDL cholesterol concentration in women and this relation was dependent on the influence of obesity. An inverse relationship between plasma cholesteryl ester (PCE) linoleic acid proportion and molar LCAT rate in women was also explained by influences of obesity on the data. Both fractional and molar LCAT rates were positively correlated with obesity (Quetelet's Index and subscapular skinfold thickness) in women but not in men. This study showed the influence of sex on nearly all correlations involving LCAT activity in combined groups of men and women.
Atherosclerosis
1979 Nov
PMID:Lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase activity, plasma and lipoprotein lipids and obesity in men and women. 51 42
The characterization and change of lipids in aorta with the progression of
atherosclerosis
were elucidated in Watanabe hereditable hyperlipidemic (WHHL) rabbit, an animal model for human familial hypercholesterolemia as compared with those of normal rabbits. The amount of total phospholipids in the aorta of WHHL rabbit increased about 6-fold that of normal level. Sphingomyelin showed the largest increase and phosphatidylcholine the second in the aorta of WHHL rabbit. The fatty acid composition of sphingomyelin was characteristic of higher content of unsaturated fatty acids. It was suggested that the specific increase in both sphingomyelin and its unsaturated fatty acid content might be ascribed to regulation mechanism to recover the membrane fluidity which was reduced by the marked accumulation of cholesterol in the aorta of WHHL rabbit. Glycerophospholipids in the aorta of WHHL rabbit also contained more unsaturated fatty acids than those in normal ones. It was suggested that the higher amounts of unsaturated fatty acids of glycerophospholipids might be derived from those of serum lipoproteins and that they also might help to restore or recover membrane fluidity in the cholesterol-accumulated aorta of WHHL rabbit.
Phosphatidylcholine
in the aorta of WHHL rabbit contained a large amount of alkylacyl type-homologue (25-fold normal level) which was a precursor of platelet-activating factor (PAF). The increase of lysophosphatidylcholine, a potent chemotactic factor for monocyte, was also observed in WHHL rabbit. The increase of these chemical mediators indicated severe pathologic state in the atherosclerotic lesions of the aorta of WHHL rabbit.
...
PMID:Characterization and change of phospholipids in the aorta of Watanabe hereditable hyperlipidemic rabbit. 209 24
Lecithin
:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) and lysolecithin acyltransferase (LAT) are two activities carried out by the same plasma enzyme, but require different apoprotein activators. The LCAT reaction takes place primarily on high density lipoproteins (HDL) and is activated by serum albumin, whereas LAT takes place on low density lipoproteins (LDL) and is inhibited by albumin. In nephrotic syndrome (NS), the levels of serum albumin are reduced, whereas the LDL levels are increased, and therefore, the ratio of LAT/LCAT activities should be increased. To test this hypothesis, we estimated the lipid levels and the two enzyme activities in experimental NS induced in rats by the injection of anti-Fx1A antibody (passive Heymann nephritis). As found in other nephrotic conditions, the plasma lipid levels rose progressively as the proteinuria increased and the serum albumin concentration declined. In addition, the ratio of LAT/LCAT activities increased by about fourfold after nine days of induction of nephritis. The LCAT activity correlated positively and the LAT activity negatively with serum albumin levels. The esterified cholesterol correlated positively with LCAT activity in normal rats but negatively in nephrotic animals, indicating that most of the cholesteryl esters in NS may be non-LCAT derived. The free cholesterol/lecithin ratio, a known risk factor for
atherosclerosis
, increased significantly in nephrotic rats. Furthermore, since the increase in the LAT activity produces more disaturated lecithins, another putative risk factor, the cumulative risk of coronary heart disease may be increased in long-term NS.
...
PMID:Plasma lipids and acyltransferase activities in experimental nephrotic syndrome. 277 94
Elevated plasma lipid concentrations and increased platelet activation are risk factors in the development of
atherosclerosis
. Nine patients with type IIa hyperlipoproteinemia and nine patients with type IV hyperlipoproteinemia were given soya lecithin, 12 g/day, for 3 months. Plasma cholesterol and triglycerides were reduced by 15 and 23%, respectively, and HDL-cholesterol increased by 16% in the hypercholesterolemic patients. Platelet function was unchanged. In the hypertriglyceridemic patients, total cholesterol fell by 18%, triglycerides by 36%, and HDL-cholesterol increased by 14%. There was a 27% reduction in platelet aggregation (P less than 0.01). Seventeen hypertriglyceridemic patients then received increasing doses of soya lecithin for 1-month periods (6, 12, and 18 g/day). The optimal lipoprotein-lowering effect was achieved with a daily dose of 12 g soya lecithin per day. Both low-density lipoprotein and very-low-density lipoprotein levels were reduced, and HDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein levels were reduced, and HDL-cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I concentrations were increased. Platelet aggregation in response to collagen and ADP was significantly reduced, parallel with the reduction in triglyceride level.
Soya lecithin
supplementing the diet may be useful in the management of the hypertriglyceridemic patient.
...
PMID:Dietary soya lecithin decreases plasma triglyceride levels and inhibits collagen- and ADP-induced platelet aggregation. 377 75
Vervet monkeys ( Ceropithecus aethiops pygerethrus ) were placed on semipurified diets containing 14% fat of which 3.2 or 6.0% was present as trans-unsaturated fatty acid (t-FA). Two groups were fed the high and low levels of t-FA for a year and two others were fed t-FA for 6 months and then returned to the control diet for 6 months more. One other group was fed the control diet for a year. The control diet contained 14% fat which was a mixture of 72% olive oil and 28% corn oil. There were no significant differences in weight gain. Monkeys fed 6% t-FA or control diets for one year had lowest liver weights. Serum cholesterol and triglycerides in monkeys fed 3.2% t-FA for one year were 134 and 55 mg/dl, respectively; in monkeys returned to control diet after 6 months on 6% t-FA the values were 146 and 50 g/dl. Serum and triglyceride levels for the other 3 groups were 166 +/- 2 and 70 +/- 2 mg/dl. Liver cholesterol levels ranged from 4.0 mg/g (3.2% t-FA) to 4.7 mg/g (control) and 4.8 mg/g (6% t-FA).
Lecithin
:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity was 59.0 microM/h for controls and ranged from 52.4 microM/h (3.2% t-FA) to 73.4 microM/h (6% t-FA). Cholesterol synthesis by liver slices was not affected by diet when the substrate was acetate. When mevalonate was used, the monkeys fed either level of t-FA for 12 months exhibited greatly reduced (about 80%) cholesterogenesis. The levels of t-FA in serum and liver reflected the amount in the diet. After being returned to control diet levels of t-FA in serum and liver of monkeys (fed 3.2% t-FA) fell by 97 and 94%, respectively, and those in serum and liver of monkeys fed 6% t-FA fell by 65 and 91%. There were no significant differences in aortic
atherosclerosis
or arteriosclerosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Atherosclerosis
1984 Apr
PMID:Effect of trans-unsaturated fats on experimental atherosclerosis in vervet monkeys. 642 84
Fish eye disease (FED) is characterized by severe corneal opacities, causing impaired vision, and dyslipoproteinaemia: hypertriglyceridaemia, raised levels of very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), triglyceride enrichment of low density lipoproteins (LDL) and reduction of high density lipoproteins (HDL). The disease is described in two unrelated families. In both there was a high proportion of low HDL in relatives without eye disease. VLDL, LDL and HDL had normal electrophoretic mobilities. The concentrations of VLDL cholesterol and triglycerides were increased fivefold. LDL cholesterol levels were normal but LDL triglycerides markedly increased. HDL cholesterol was reduced by 90% as were the levels of HDL apolipoproteins. The major part of HDL cholesterol was in the HDL3 fraction. FED HDL were smaller than normal with molecular weights of 115,000 daltons.
Lecithin
: cholesterol acyltransferase activity and amount of cholesterol esters in serum were normal. Postheparin lipoprotein and hepatic lipases showed normal or subnormal values. Clinically FED differs from other familial conditions with deficiency of HDL such as Tangier disease, LCAT-deficiency and Milano-AI-apoprotein disease. In spite of the extremely low HDL cholesterol FED is not characterized by premature
atherosclerosis
. Mechanisms for the dyslipoproteinaemia are discussed.
...
PMID:Fish eye disease: a new familial condition with massive corneal opacities and dyslipoproteinaemia. 680 51
Lecithin
cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) appears to be one of the factors controlling the intravascular turnover rate of cholesterol. LCAT activity in healthy subjects is significantly higher in men than in women of the same relative body weight, total and free cholesterol and triglycerides. In healthy men sleep deprivation induced a decrease in LCAT activity combined with a decline of serum cholesterol concentration; consequently, the intravascular turnover rate of cholesterol did not significantly change. In hypertensive patients the decrease in cholesterol turnover rate correlated with the degree of hypertension and the response of blood pressure to medication. Reduced turnover rate of cholesterol was more frequent in men than in women, in spite of higher plasma cholesterol concentration in the latter. During a 4-month period of treatment etiroxate of hyperlipoproteinemia II and IV, the only significant change in plasma cholesterol level was a drop observed after the first two weeks; on the other hand, the turnover rate of cholesterol rose gradually and approached normal values due to a highly increased LCAT activity. Obesity and diabetes were associated with a high percentage of deviations in the studied parameters of cholesterol metabolism. The turnover rate of cholesterol measured three months after acute myocardial infarction was below normal in 80% of patients, whereas hypercholesterolemia was manifested in only less than 40%. The results imply that the intravascular turnover rate of cholesterol estimated by measurement of LCAT activity may be a suitable indicator of the internal balance of cholesterol, substantially more delicate and discriminative than a mere determination of the actual plasma concentration of cholesterol or plasma lipoprotein. Judging by our observations, deviations in the internal dynamics of cholesterol may play an important role in the pathogenesis of coronary
atherosclerosis
.
...
PMID:Cholesterol turnover and risk factors for the development of coronary heart disease. 707 90
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