Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020473 (hyperlipidemia)
15,891 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Methods for quantitation of the major apoproteins of human serum very low density lipoprotein have been developed employing tetramethylurea, which delipidates the lipoprotein and selectively precipitates apolipoprotein B. Six soluble apoproteins are separated by electrophoresis in polyacrylamide gel. One of these is a previously unrecognized species of R-alanine (R4-alanine), more anionic than the R3-alanine polypeptide. Conditions of staining have been found which yield reproducibly linear chromogenic response with native lipoprotein and with each purified apoprotein. Recovery of protein in the seven species measured accounts for over 97% of the total in the very low density lipoprotein of normolipidemic individuals and in most samples from individuals with endogenous hyperlipemia. The mean content of apolipoprotein B in 43 samples from normolipidemic subjects was 36.9(+/-1.2 SEM)% of total protein, The distribution of the major soluble apoproteins as mean (+/-SEM) percentage of the soluble fraction was : R-serine, 5.3+/-o.5; arginine-rich, 20.6+/-1.0; R-glutamic, 10.6+/-0.4; R2-alanine, 28.3+/-0.7; R3-alanine, 26.9+/-0.5; and R4-alanine, 8.0+/-0.5. Distribution of the apoproteins was a function of particle diameter of very low density lipoprotein in fractions separated by gel permeation chromatography and by density gradient ultracentrifugation. In fractions below 700-800 A, apolipoprotein B comprised an increasing percentage of the total protein with decreasing particle diameter. Among the soluble proteins the percentage of the arginine-rich and R-serine polypeptides increased and that of the R-glutamic polypeptide declined progressively with decreasing particle size. Apoprotein distribution was similar in fractions of similar particle size from normolipidemic and hyperlipemic subjects with the exception that all fractions from the hyperlipemic subjects contained more R-serine and some, more arginine rich polypeptide. Even in the absence of chylomicrons, the distribution of soluble apoproteins in particles of diameters greater than 700-800 A was usually similar to that of the smallest particles. This suggests that the largest particles may include products of the partial catabolism of chylomicrons.
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PMID:Apoprotein composition of very low density lipoproteins of human serum. 17 34

Thirteen patients with severe acne were treated for 16 weeks with 1.0 mg/kg/day isotretinoin. There were significant increases in serum cholesterol (P less than 0.02), triglycerides (P less than 0.02) and apolipoprotein B (P less than 0.02). No changes were found in serum apolipoprotein A-1, non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA), carnitine, lactate, pyruvate, glycerol, alanine, beta-hydroxybutyrate, glucose or insulin. We therefore found no evidence that the hyperlipidaemia of isotretinoin therapy is due to increased fluxes of NEFA from adipose tissue to the liver, although we cannot exclude the possibility that there are changes in the proportion of NEFA being esterified to triglyceride or undergoing beta-oxidation. We suggest that the hyperlipidaemia induced by isotretinoin may be due to an increase in circulating lipoprotein from increased production or impaired catabolism.
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PMID:Isotretinoin and serum lipids: studies on fatty acid, apolipoprotein and intermediary metabolism. 295 78

A 3-year-old child with glycogenosis due to hepatic phosphorylase kinase deficiency is described. His clinical presentation was unusually severe. Biochemical studies revealed a lack of hypoglycemia, the presence of marked ketosis and hyperlipidemia, and a normal glycemic response to glucagon and to loading with galactose, fructose, and alanine. The ketosis was reversed by glucagon administration. Changes in plasma concentrations of lactate, pyruvate, beta-OH butyrate, and alanine in response to glucagon, galactose, fructose, and alanine administration are reported. The child responded poorly to a high protein diet. His condition improved markedly with a high carbohydrate diet. The significance of the findings is discussed.
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PMID:Clinical and laboratory observations in a child with hepatic phosphorylase kinase deficiency. 345 48

Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) is a chronic nonsuppurative, destructive cholangitis, whose etiology is unknown. Morbidity arises early from pruritus and later from hypercholesterolemia with xanthoma formation. Therapy is supportive and directed at the complications of cholestasis. Plasmapheresis has been reported to benefit patients with hyperlipidemia and PBC; thus a pilot study of plasmapheresis utilizing the Haemonetics Model 30 with replacement by albumin and saline was conducted. Five patients (four female and one male) with a mean age of 43 (range 29-58) and a mean duration of illness of 9.5 years (range 6-21) with marked jaundice, xanthomas, xanthelasma, hepatomegaly, fatigability, anorexia, and pruritus, as well as mild nausea were studied. Peripheral neuropathy was present in two patients. Two patients had splenomegaly. Two patients had an associated Sjogren syndrome. All patients had high serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and cholesterol levels and mild elevations in aspartate amino transferase and alanine amino transferase activities. Immune complexes measured in four patients were present. Antimitochondrial antibody titers were significant in all patients. Patients underwent a mean of 63 plasmapheresis procedures over a mean of 112 weeks removing a mean of 94.7 liters of plasma. No serious toxicity was seen. All patients showed a reduction in pruritus, xanthomas, xanthelasmas, and serum cholesterol values. The two patients who had evidence of Sjogren syndrome noted subjective improvement. All patients who had fatigue, anorexia and nausea also noted moderate improvement. There was no change in hepatomegaly or splenomegaly in patients demonstrating such organomegaly. Liver function did not change significantly. Overall, four patients had improvement in their condition and one patient achieved stability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The clinical effectiveness and safety of chronic plasmapheresis in patients with primary biliary cirrhosis. 403 Jul 9

Resonances for the ketone bodies 3-D-hydroxybutyrate, acetone and acetoacetate are readily detected in serum, plasma and urine samples from fasting and diabetic subjects by 1H n.m.r. spectroscopy at 400 MHz. Besides the simultaneous observation of metabolites, the major advantage of n.m.r. is that little or no pretreatment of samples is required. N.m.r. determinations of 3-D-hydroxybutyrate, acetoacetate, lactate, valine and alanine were compared with determinations made with conventional assays at six 2-hourly intervals after insulin withdrawal from a diabetic subject. The n.m.r. results closely paralleled those of other assays although, by n.m.r., acetoacetate levels continued to rise rather than reaching a plateau 4h after insulin withdrawal. The 3-D-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate ratio in urine during withdrawal gradually increased to the value observed in plasma (3.0 +/- 0.2) as determined by n.m.r. The acetoacetate/acetone ratio in urine (17 +/- 6) was much higher than in plasma (2.5 +/- 0.7). Depletion of a mobile pool of fatty acids in plasma during fasting, as seen by n.m.r., paralleled that seen during insulin withdrawal. These fatty acids were thought to be largely in chylomicrons, acylglycerols and lipoproteins, and were grossly elevated in plasma samples from a non-insulin-dependent diabetic and in cases of known hyperlipidaemia.
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PMID:Proton-nuclear-magnetic-resonance studies of serum, plasma and urine from fasting normal and diabetic subjects. 669 35

The purpose of this study was to investigate the triglyceride-lowering effect of fluvastatin, a new 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl-coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase inhibitor, in the combined hyperlipidemia of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). In this double-blind trial, 66 patients with NIDDM (24 men and 42 women, age 37-71), with low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels of 130-300 mg/dL (3.4-7.8 mmol/L) and triglyceride (TG) levels of 200-1,000 mg/dL (2.3-11.3 mmol/L) despite an 8-week period of diet modification, were randomized to receive either fluvastatin at 20 mg once daily (at night) or placebo for 6 weeks, followed by an increase of fluvastatin to 20 mg twice daily for an additional 6 weeks of treatment. After 12 weeks, fluvastatin decreased plasma levels of total cholesterol by 19.9% (p < 0.001), LDL-C by 24.3% (p < 0.001), TG by 15.3% (p < 0.01), very low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (VLDL-C) by 19.7% (p < 0.001), apolipoprotein (apo) B by 21.3% (p < 0.001), and apo E by 18.1% (p < 0.05), whereas high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) levels were increased by 4.6% (p < 0.05). Within the intermediate-density lipoprotein cholesterol (IDL-C) fraction, a constituent analysis revealed a total cholesterol reduction of 35% (p < 0.01). Greater decreases in TG were seen in patients who had higher levels of TG at baseline. Slight increases in glycemic indices and body weight were seen in both treatment groups. The occurrence of clinical and laboratory abnormalities was similar with both active treatment and placebo, and no myositis was observed. Slight increases in aspartate (ASAT; mean 5.6 U/L at the higher dose) and alanine (ALAT; mean 5.1 U/L at the higher dose) aminotransferases were not clinically significant. In this first, parallel-group placebo-controlled trial of a reductase inhibitor in a free-living NIDDM population, fluvastatin safely improved the combined TG, VLDL-C, IDL-C, LDL-C, and HDL-C abnormalities associated with NIDDM.
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PMID:Efficacy and safety of fluvastatin in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia. 801 70

Out of 12 patients with primary hyperlipidemia (HL) included in the study ischemic heart disease was diagnosed in 4 and hypertension stage I-II in 6 patients. HL stage II B, III, IV and V was registered in 7, 2, 2 and 1 patients, respectively. Hypolipidemic therapy included hypolipidemic diet and Lipanor (Sanofi-Chinoin-Winthrop, France) in a dose 100 mg once a day after evening meal. The course lasted 3 months. Blood serum was examined for concentrations of total cholesterol (CS), triglycerides (TG), CS of HDLP, glucose, uric acid, prothrombin, fibrinogen, alanine and asparagine transaminase, alkaline phosphatase, creatinine, total bilirubin. After 1 month of lipanol treatment mean total CS concentration in the serum fell by 21.9% and remained such for 2-3 months of treatment. 1 month after the drug discontinuation mean concentration of total CS was under the initial one by 4.65%. Mean serum concentrations of TG 1 month after treatment decreased by 41.7%, after 2 months by 48.8%. Mean concentration of HDLP CS after 1 month of treatment rose by 19.2% and by 33.1% after one more month. 1 month after Lipanor discontinuation mean HDLP CS concentration exceeded the baseline level by 16%. Fibrinogen and prothrombin index declined. Hypolipidemic effect of Lipanor varied from case to case.
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PMID:[A trial of the use of the hypolipidemic preparation Lipanor (ciprofibrate) in patients with primary hyperlipidemia]. 877 89

In contrast to L-glutamine, lipid emulsions are routinely administered to patients receiving nutritional support. The provision of fat during intravenous feeding is essential, but the potentially toxic byproducts of fatty acid oxidation may have adverse metabolic consequences. In the present study, we have examined the effect of L-glutamine, an inhibitor of fatty acid oxidation, on the development of defective blood glucose regulation caused by a 48-hour infusion of 10% intralipid in rats. Male Sprague-Dawley rats (200-290 g) were anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital, the right femoral vein cannulated, and baseline blood samples were taken. Each rat was placed in a metabolic cage with access to water, in the presence or absence of rodent chow. Two hours after waking, the rats were infused with 10% intralipid with either saline (control), 2% L-glutamine, or 2% L-alanine. After 48 hours, all animals were sacrificed and blood samples were again obtained. The mean +/- SEM plasma glucose levels before and after lipid infusion at the rate of 1 mL/hr in control rats fed ad libitum, were 125 +/- 13 and 170 +/- 5 mg/dL (p < 0.01, n = 7). Similarly, plasma free fatty acids (FFA) in these animals rose from 0.74 +/- 0.11 to 1.34 +/- 0.32 mmol/L (p < 0.05). Plasma insulin levels also increased from 337 +/- 44 to 1278 +/- 88 pg/mL (p < 0.01). Reduction of intralipid dose infusion did not prevent insulin resistance characterized by hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia. However, addition of L-glutamine to the high-dose lipid infusion with chow feeding prevented changes in plasma glucose, insulin levels, and FFA but not triglyceride levels. Also, glutamine but not alanine supplementation in intralipid infused rats without chow feeding prevented changes in plasma glucose, insulin, and malondialdehyde levels. In conclusion, these data show that glutamine supplementation during intravenous lipid administration in rats prevents the development of impaired glucose regulation associated with hyperlipidemia.
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PMID:Effect of L-glutamine supplementation on impaired glucose regulation during intravenous lipid administration. 887 24

Hypercholesterolemia clustering in families not explained by either low density lipoprotein (LDL)-receptor mutations producing familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), or the apolipoprotein B (apo B) Arg3500-->Gln mutation with familial defective apo B (FDB), is common in the Finnish population. In search of previously unknown apo B mutations, we screened exons 26 to 29 of the apo B gene in 68 Finnish severely hypercholesterolemic (> or = 8 mmol/l) non-FH, non-FDB patients, using a single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis based screening method. Four rare and two polymorphic previously unreported DNA variations were detected. The rare variants were a three-nucleotide deletion, with the deletion of Asp2186, an A11961-->G change leading to a Thr3918-->Ala change, a T12922-->G change causing a Val4238-->Ala substitution, and a neutral T12935-->C change leading to a new RsaI cutting site. The polymorphic G12937-->C and G13569-->A changes leading to Arg4243-->Thr and Ala4454-->Thr substitutions, respectively, had minor allele frequencies of 0.03 and 0.02. None of these variants seemed to explain the hyperlipidemia in these patients. A major Finnish mutation causing severe hypercholesterolemia is unlikely to exist in the 3' two-thirds of the coding area of the apo B gene.
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PMID:Screening of the 3' two-thirds of the coding area of the apo B gene in Finnish hypercholesterolemic patients report of six new genetic variants. 905 Jul 76

Polymorphism of the fatty acid-binding protein 2 (FABP2) gene has been shown to affect the affinity of intestinal FABP for fatty acids. This could cause changes in postprandial triglyceride metabolism. In the present study, postprandial lipemia was studied in normotriglyceridemic subjects with genetic variation in the FABP2 gene. Oral fat-loading tests were performed in 8 subjects homozygous for the Thr-encoding allele at codon 54 of the FABP2 gene and in 7 subjects homozygous for the Ala-encoding allele (wild type). There were no significant differences between these 2 groups in age, body mass index, fasting plasma triglyceride and cholesterol levels, or fasting glucose and insulin levels. The increase of plasma triglyceride concentration after the fat test meal was significantly greater in subjects who were homozygous for the Thr-54 allele (area under the response curve, 4.27+/-1.31 versus 2.49+/-1.18 mmol/L x h-1, P=0.04). The difference was seen in both chylomicron (2.51+/-0. 98 versus 1.41+/-0.74 mmol/L x h-1, P=0.03) and very low-density lipoprotein triglycerides (1.57+/-0.77 versus 0.99+/-0.40 mmol/L x h-1, P=0.04). Postprandial triglyceride response correlated with fasting triglycerides in the Ala-54 homozygotes (r=0.79, P=0.05) but not in the Thr-54 homozygotes (r=0.09), who showed a strong correlation between triglyceride and insulin responses (r=0.83, P=0. 02). With reservations related to a small number of subjects studied, these results indicate that the Thr-encoding allele of the FABP2 gene is associated with increased postprandial lipemia. The lipemic response was associated with postprandial insulin response, suggesting that in the Thr-54 homozygotes, altered postprandial lipemia may also modify insulin action or vice versa.
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PMID:Postprandial lipemic response is modified by the polymorphism at codon 54 of the fatty acid-binding protein 2 gene. 976 33


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