Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0020473 (
hyperlipidemia
)
15,891
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Vitamin E
in conventional therapeutic doses (400 mg/day) was given to 17 patients with
hyperlipidemia
on long-term treatment with diets enriched in polyunsaturated fatty acids and with clofibrate. The effect of this treatment on total serum cholesterol and on serum triglycerides was studied. To avoid influences of other factors (especially changes in dietary habits) the investigation was performed giving the patients tocopherol and placebo randomly, double blind and cross-over. No significant effect of vitamin E on total serum cholesterol or on serum triglycerides was seen.
...
PMID:Effect of vitamin E on serum cholesterol and triglycerides in hyperlipidemic patients treated with diet and clofibrate. 20 60
1.
Vitamin E
content in the adipose tissue was examined in rats with and without vitamin E deficiency. With the progression of vitamin E depletion, the more rapid decrease in tocopherol concentration was observed in brown adipose tissue (BAT) than in white adipose tissue (WAT), and the rate of decrease of tocopherol was approximately three times faster in BAT than in WAT. After the intramuscular administration of 10 mg/kg of all-rac-tocopheryl acetate twice a week for two weeks to vitamin E-deficient rats, a similar pattern of increase was observed in the tocopherol concentrations of BAT and WAT, although the rate of increase was slower in WAT than in BAT. 2. Changes of tocopherol concentration in BAT and WAT were investigated in normo-nourished rats with
hyperlipemia
produced by the intramuscular injection of Triton WR-1339 for 7 days. A marked increase in tocopherol concentration was observed in both BAT and WAT in the late period of
hyperlipemia
, with the increase being greater in WAT. 3. The fatty acid composition of adipose tissue was compared between rats with and without vitamin E deficiency. No significant differences were observed in BAT and WAT between the two groups. 4. The glucose uptake of WAT was not altered in vitamin E-deficient rats when compared with control rats.
...
PMID:Adipose tissues and vitamin E. 208 75
The effects of estrogen-induced
hyperlipidemia
on plasma lipid peroxidation, fatty acid composition and osmotic fragility of erythrocytes in chickens were studied. Young male chickens implanted with estrogen for three wk developed a marked
hyperlipidemia
. Plasma levels of triglyceride, cholesterol and phospholipid were elevated 68-, four- and 24-fold, respectively, over controls. There was also a two-fold increase in plasma lipid peroxidation measured by the thiobarbituric acid test.
Vitamin E
supplement (1,000 IU/kg diet) reduced the plasma lipid peroxidation to the control level, but had no effect on the plasma lipid content. Estrogen-induced
hyperlipidemia
resulted in changes in the fatty acid composition of membrane lipids of erythrocytes. The major changes were an increase in oleic acid from 10.0% to 14.2% and a decrease in linoleic acid from 31.3% to 26.0%. The erythrocytes with an altered membrane fatty acid composition were found to have an increased osmotic fragility. It was apparent that there was a direct correlation between the oleic acid content and the osmotic fragility of erythrocytes.
...
PMID:Effects of estrogen-induced hyperlipidemia on the erythrocyte membrane in chicks. 318 19
Vitamin E
, cholesterol and triglycerides were measured in blood sera of 167 patients (40-59 years old) with angina pectoris. An increase in concentration of vitamin E was observed only in patients with
hyperlipidemia
, whereas the vitamin content was similar to the control values in patients with hypertension, in smokers and in the persons free of risk factor. Distinct correlation was found only between vitamin E and the triglycerides contents (r = 0.42). These data corresponded to the results of a previous examination of 224 men and 435 women without ischemic heart disease: in men the content of vitamin E correlated with triglycerides (r = 0.50) and in women--with cholesterol (r = 0.34). The ratio of vitamin E/triglycerides appears to be a more adequate index of the vitamin content in men.
...
PMID:[Vitamin E and serum lipids in ischemic heart disease]. 647 33
A model of early atherosclerosis in hamsters with moderate hypercholesterolemia (217 to 271 mg/dL) was established that was highly responsive to exogenous antioxidants. A key feature of this model was elevation of vascular oxidative stress by use of a diet deficient in nutritional antioxidants and supplemented with corn oil (10%) and cholesterol (0.2%, 0.4%, or 0.8%). After 10 weeks on the 0.4% cholesterol diet, mean plasma alpha-tocopherol levels declined from 5.68 +/- 0.30 to 1.27 +/- 0.15 micrograms/mL, while monocyte-macrophage foam cell lesions in the aortic arch, as assayed by video microscopy/image analysis of oil red O-stained histological specimens, increased from undetectable at week 0 to 60,900 +/- 5400 microns 2 per specimen at week 10 (mean +/- SEM, n = 36).
alpha-Tocopherol
or probucol administered for 10 weeks markedly suppressed LDL oxidation ex vivo and profoundly inhibited aortic foam cell formation. However, the effects of antioxidants on aortic lesions were attenuated at higher plasma cholesterol levels, although LDL oxidation ex vivo was effectively inhibited. With a plasma cholesterol level at approximately 250 mg/dL, the maximum effect of alpha-tocopherol on lesion size reached approximately 36% of control value, and the dose for half-maximal effect was approximately 10 mg.kg-1.d-1, which resulted in a plasma alpha-tocopherol value of approximately 20 micrograms/mL. Under these conditions a linear, inverse correlation of aortic lesion size and plasma alpha-tocopherol concentration was observed (n = 68, r = -0.581, P < .001). The data demonstrate that LDL oxidation is a significant component of early atherogenesis in this model but suggest that
hyperlipidemia
can outweigh the therapeutic effectiveness of antioxidants. The high sensitivity of aortic lesion initiation to alpha-tocopherol in hamsters maintained on moderately hypercholesterolemic diets depleted of endogenous antioxidants demonstrates that vascular oxidative stress can be isolated from other causative factors in an in vivo model of atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Relation of vascular oxidative stress, alpha-tocopherol, and hypercholesterolemia to early atherosclerosis in hamsters. 774 45
The effect of
d-alpha-tocopherol
on the progression of renal dysfunction was investigated in rats injected with adriamycin (ADR), a model of progressive glomerulosclerosis associated with the nephrotic syndrome. Treatment with
d-alpha-tocopherol
was started 1 day before or 1 day after ADR injections (BE-TOC or AF-TOC rats). When compared to rats without
d-alpha-tocopherol
treatment (ADR-CON rats), the serum total cholesterol and triglyceride levels were significantly lower in the BE-TOC and AF-TOC groups. In week 16, the LDL cholesterol level and the atherogenic index were both significantly lower in BE-TOC and AF-TOC rats than in ADR-CON rats. The urinary protein, serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, malondialdehyde, and systolic blood pressure levels as well as the glomerulosclerosis score were high in ADR-CON rats, and reduced in BE-TOC or AF-TOC rats. There were no significant differences in body weight and serum albumin between the three groups in week 16. It is concluded that
d-alpha-tocopherol
can improve
hyperlipidemia
and ameliorate glomerulosclerosis in rats with ADR-induced progressive renal failure. Thus,
d-alpha-tocopherol
may have the potential for clinical application to treat focal glomerulosclerosis.
...
PMID:Alpha tocopherol improves focal glomerulosclerosis in rats with adriamycin-induced progressive renal failure. 783 58
We evaluated in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of 45 well-defined patients with familial combined
hyperlipidemia
, the effect of gemfibrozil (1,200 mg/day) or simvastatin (20 mg/day) on apolipoprotein-B (apo-B)-containing lipoproteins, low-density lipoprotein (LDL) subfraction profile, and LDL oxidizability. Although both drugs reduced plasma cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations, gemfibrozil reduced plasma triglycerides more effectively and simvastatin reduced plasma cholesterol more effectively. LDL cholesterol was reduced with simvastatin. With both drugs, total serum apo-B concentration decreased. With gemfibrozil, this was due to an exclusive reduction (-46%) of very low/intermediate-density lipoprotein (VLDL + IDL) apo-B, whereas simvastatin decreased apo-B in both VLDL + IDL and LDL (34% and 15%, respectively). Initially, a dense LDL subfraction profile was present in all patients. The decrease in LDL cholesterol with simvastatin was due to a decrease in all isolated LDL subfractions except LDL2; gemfibrozil increased LDL1 and LDL2 cholesterol (p = 0.001) and reduced LDL4 cholesterol, resulting in a more buoyant LDL subfraction profile compared with simvastatin. In both groups, a predominance of small dense LDL remained despite therapy. LDL fatty acid composition showed a shift from oleic acid to linoleic acid after gemfibrozil; arachidonic acid increased after simvastatin.
Vitamin E
was lower after gemfibrozil. In the measurements of LDL oxidation, only the oxidation rate was significantly reduced with simvastatin. Thus, quantitative and qualitative changes of LDL cholesterol had only a small effect on total in vitro LDL oxidizability in this population with familial combined
hyperlipidemia
.
...
PMID:Comparison of gemfibrozil versus simvastatin in familial combined hyperlipidemia and effects on apolipoprotein-B-containing lipoproteins, low-density lipoprotein subfraction profile, and low-density lipoprotein oxidizability. 785 26
The
RRR-alpha-tocopherol
(vitamin E) content in plasma from 46 patients with liver diseases and 23 healthy controls was determined by high performance liquid chromatography and electrochemical detection. Patients were divided into three groups: alcoholic liver diseases (n = 17; group A), hemochromatosis (n = 17; group B) and Wilson's disease (n = 12; group C). Lipid-standardized alpha-tocopherol levels were determined to neutralize differences due to
hyperlipemia
. The ratio of serum vitamin E to serum lipids (cholesterol, triglycerides, phospholipids) was highest in healthy controls and in patients in group A with cirrhosis and normal transaminases and bilirubin. Patients in group A with acute or chronic ethanol intoxication and high bilirubin levels had a 37% lower lipid-standardized vitamin E level than controls. Patients in group B with hemochromatosis, showing high serum iron (> 180 micrograms/dl), a low free iron binding capacity (< 8 mumol/l) and high ferritin-levels (< 450 micrograms/l), had a 34% lower vitamin E/lipid ratio than healthy controls. No significant lowering of the vitamin E/lipid ratio was observed in the other patients in group B. A significant decrease (37%) in the vitamin E/lipid ratio was only detectable in patients with Wilson's disease (group C) showing high free serum copper (> 10 micrograms/dl). The data support a role for free radicals in the pathogenesis of active liver diseases.
...
PMID:Low vitamin E content in plasma of patients with alcoholic liver disease, hemochromatosis and Wilson's disease. 781 21
High fat diet intake in rats resulted in
hyperlipidemia
which was evidenced by elevated levels of plasma cholesterol, free fatty acids, triglycerides and increased LDLc/HDLc ratio.
Vitamin E
(400 mg/kg body wt/day) administration for 60 days prevented the elevations in plasma lipid levels. It reduced LDLc/HDLc ratio, lipid peroxide levels and elevated the level of reduced glutathione (GSH) in hyperlipidemic rats. Vitamin-E was non-toxic.
...
PMID:Effect of vitamin-E on high fat diet induced hyperlipidemia in rats. 827 Feb 85
The effect of
Vitamin E
treatment was studied in experimental
hyperlipidaemia
. The male Wistar rats got control diet and parallel fat rich diet contained 2% cholesterol, 0.5% cholic acid and 20% sunflower oil added into LATI food during 9 days. The treated hyperlipidemic animals got vitamin E for 9 days in daily 8.56 mg/b.w.kg dose mixed in food. The effect of antioxidant treatment on changes of lipid peroxidation, content of diene conjugates, thiobarbituric acid reactive products and natural scavenger capacity of rat liver homogenates and microsome fractions were measured by spectrophotometric and luminometric methods. Fatty acid composition of lipid fraction of samples was determined by capillary gas chromatography.
Vitamin E
in
hyperlipidemia
increased the natural scavenger capacity of liver and decreased the level of thiobarbituric acid reactive products and dien conjugates. There was no change in fatty acid composition of samples on effect of vitamin E antioxidant treatment.
...
PMID:[Antioxidant effect of vitamin E in experimental hyperlipidemia]. 835 Nov 40
1
2
3
4
Next >>