Preserved endothelial function in patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia and low functional lipoprotein lipase activity - PubMed (original) (raw)

Preserved endothelial function in patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia and low functional lipoprotein lipase activity

P J Chowienczyk et al. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1997 Apr.

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Abstract

Objectives: We sought to determine whether hypertriglyceridemia in patients with lipoprotein lipase (LPL) dysfunction is associated with endothelial dysfunction in resistance vessels of the forearm vasculature.

Background: Vasodilator responses to acetylcholine, acting through stimulation of nitric oxide (NO) release from the endothelium, are impaired in hypercholesterolemia and normalized by L-arginine, suggesting dysfunction of the L-arginine/NO pathway. Similar abnormalities have been reported in conditions associated with hypertriglyceridemia, such as non-insulin-dependent diabetes. The relation between endothelial function and plasma triglyceride concentrations has, however, not previously been studied in vivo.

Methods: We examined forearm blood flow responses to brachial artery infusions of acetylcholine (alone and with L-arginine) and nitroprusside (an NO donor) in 17 patients with severe hypertriglyceridemia (mean [+/- SD] plasma triglyceride concentration 1,914 +/- 1,288 mg/dl) but normal low density lipoprotein cholesterol (89 +/- 31 mg/dl) and in 34 normolipidemic control subjects. Severe LPL dysfunction was demonstrated in 10 of 17 patients.

Results: Acetylcholine (7.5 and 15 microg/min) produced similar forearm blood flow responses in hypertriglyceridemic patients (mean [+/- SEM] 7.7 +/- 0.9 and 10.5 +/- 1.2 ml/min per 100 ml) and in control subjects (7.5 +/- 0.6 and 11.0 +/- 0.8 ml/min per 100 ml, p = 0.78 by analysis of variance). Responses to acetylcholine co-infused with L-arginine (10 mg/min) and nitroprusside (3 and 10 microg/min) were also similar in hypertriglyceridemic patients and control subjects (p = 0.93 and p = 0.27 for acetylcholine with L-arginine and nitroprusside, respectively). The ratio response to acetylcholine/response to nitroprusside differed between hypertriglyceridemic patients and control subjects by only 1%. The study had >90% power (alpha = 0.05) to detect a difference >30% in this ratio.

Conclusions: Severe hypertriglyceridemia associated with LPL dysfunction is not associated with the degree of endothelial dysfunction seen in moderate hypercholesterolemia when responses to acetylcholine are impaired by >40%.

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