Lipids in Health and Disease (Oct 2012)

Fasting remnant lipoproteins can predict postprandial hyperlipidemia

  • Nagata Tomoki,
  • Sugiyama Daisuke,
  • Kise Takako,
  • Tsuji Satomi,
  • Ohira Hideo,
  • Sato Itsuko,
  • Yamamoto Mari,
  • Kohsaka Hitomi,
  • Kawano Seiji,
  • Yamashita Shizuya,
  • Ishikawa Yuichi,
  • Fujioka Yoshio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-511X-11-146
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 146

Abstract

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Abstract Background Hypertriglyceridemia and postprandial hyperlipidemia is thought to play an important role in atherosclerosis, but to select patients at high-risk for cardiovascular diseases is difficult with triglycerides (TG) alone in these patients. Methods To predict postprandial hyperlipidemia without inconvenient test meal loading, we examined lipid concentrations before and after test meal loading and fasting adiponectin, and investigated which of these other than TG were significant during the fasting period in 45 healthy individuals (men: women, 26:19). Results TG, remnant-like particle-cholesterol and -triglyceride (RemL-C, RLP-C, and RLP-TG), and TG/apolipoprotein(apo)B were significantly elevated after loading and fasting values significantly and positively correlated with incremental area under the curve (iAUC) (r=0.80, r=0.79, r=0.63, r=0.58, r=0.54; p Conclusion Fasting triglyceride-rich lipoprotein-related values, especially RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB are useful predictors of postprandial hyperlipidemia in young healthy individuals. Although fasting adiponectin concentration correlated with the iAUCs for TG, RemL-C, RLP-C, RLP-TG, and TG/apoB, it was not a significant predictor of postprandial hyperlipidemia in multivariable linear regression analysis.

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