cytellin and Hyperlipidemia--Familial-Combined

cytellin has been researched along with Hyperlipidemia--Familial-Combined* in 5 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for cytellin and Hyperlipidemia--Familial-Combined

ArticleYear
Decreasing the Cholesterol Burden in Heterozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia Children by Dietary Plant Stanol Esters.
    Nutrients, 2018, Dec-01, Volume: 10, Issue:12

    This review covers the current knowledge about plant stanol esters as a dietary treatment option for heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (he-FH) children. The current estimation of the prevalence of he-FH is about one out of 200⁻250 persons. In this autosomal dominant disease, the concentration of plasma low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) is strongly elevated since birth. Quantitative coronary angiography among he-FH patients has revealed that stenosing atherosclerotic plaques start to develop in he-FH males in their twenties and in he-FH females in their thirties, and that the magnitude of the plaque burden predicts future coronary events. The cumulative exposure of coronary arteries to the lifelong LDL-C elevation can be estimated by calculating the LDL-C burden (LDL-C level × years), and it can also be used to demonstrate the usefulness of dietary stanol ester treatment. Thus, when compared with untreated he-FH patients, the LDL-C burden of using statin from the age of 10 is 15% less, and if he-FH patients starts to use dietary stanol from six years onwards and a combination of statin and dietary stanol from 10 years onwards, the LDL-C burden is 21% less compared to non-treated he-FH patients. We consider dietary stanol treatment of he-FH children as a part of the LDL-C-lowering treatment package as safe and cost-effective, and particularly applicable for the family-centered care of the entire he-FH families.

    Topics: Child; Cholesterol, LDL; Female; Heterozygote; Humans; Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors; Hypercholesterolemia; Hyperlipidemia, Familial Combined; Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II; Male; Sitosterols

2018

Trials

1 trial(s) available for cytellin and Hyperlipidemia--Familial-Combined

ArticleYear
Cholesterol metabolism differs after statin therapy according to the type of hyperlipemia.
    Life sciences, 2012, Jun-06, Volume: 90, Issue:21-22

    Non-cholesterol sterols reflect cholesterol metabolism. Statins reduce cholesterol synthesis usually with a rise in cholesterol absorption. Common hyperlipemias have shown different patterns of cholesterol metabolism. We evaluated whether cholesterol absorption and synthesis may differ after statin therapy in primary hyperlipemias.. We determined lipid profile, apoprotein B and serum sterols (lathosterol, sitosterol, campesterol by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry) before and after statins in 80 untreated hyperlipemic patients, 40 with polygenic hypercholesterolemia (PH) and 40 with familial combined hyperlipemia (FCH).. At baseline in FCH lathosterol was significantly higher while campesterol and sitosterol were significantly lower than in PH. After statins, the reduction in LDL-C did not significantly differ between the two groups; in PH there was a significant decrease of lathosterol from 96.1 to 52.6 102 μmol/mmol cholesterol (p=0.0001) with no significant modifications in campesterol and sitosterol; on the opposite, in FCH lathosterol decreased from 117 to 43 102 μmol/mmol cholesterol (p=0.0001) and campesterol and sitosterol significantly increased from 38 to 48 102 μmol/mmol cholesterol (p=0.0001), and from 75 to 86 102 μmol/mmol cholesterol, (p=0.022), respectively. After statin therapy only in FCH Δ-LDL-C showed a significant inverse correlation with Δ-sitosterol and with Δ-campesterol.. Primary hyperlipemias show different patterns of response to statins: in PH LDL reduction appears completely "synthesis inhibition" dependent, while in FCH LDL decrease appears to be synthesis dependent, partially limited by absorption increase. Studying cholesterol metabolism before and after hypolipemic therapy might be useful in identifying the best tailored treatment.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Atorvastatin; Cholesterol; Cholesterol, LDL; Female; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Heptanoic Acids; Humans; Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors; Hypercholesterolemia; Hyperlipidemia, Familial Combined; Hyperlipidemias; Lipids; Male; Middle Aged; Phytosterols; Pyrroles; Simvastatin; Sitosterols

2012

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for cytellin and Hyperlipidemia--Familial-Combined

ArticleYear
Non-cholesterol sterols in different forms of primary hyperlipemias.
    Nutrition, metabolism, and cardiovascular diseases : NMCD, 2012, Volume: 22, Issue:3

    We investigated the behaviour of non-cholesterol sterols, surrogate markers of cholesterol absorption (campesterol and sitosterol) and synthesis (lathosterol), in primary hyperlipemias.. We studied 53 patients with polygenic hypercholesterolemia (PH), 38 patients with familial combined hyperlipemia (FCH), and 19 age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. In all participants, plasma sitosterol, campesterol and lathosterol were determined by gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. To correct for the effect of plasma lipid levels, non-cholesterol sterol concentrations were adjusted for plasma cholesterol (10² μmol/mmol cholesterol). Patients with FCH were more frequently men, and had higher body mass index (BMI), fasting glucose, insulin and HOMA-IR. Lathosterol was higher in FCH than in pH or controls (p < 0.05). Campesterol was significantly lower in FCH (p < 0.05), while no differences were found between pH and controls. Sitosterol displayed higher values in pH compared to FCH (p < 0.001) and controls (p < 0.05). Spearman's rank correlations showed positive correlations of lathosterol with BMI, waist circumference, HOMA-IR, triglycerides, apoprotein B, and a negative one with HDL-cholesterol. Sitosterol had a negative correlation with BMI, waist circumference, HOMA-IR, triglycerides, and a positive one with HDL-cholesterol and apoprotein AI. Multivariate regression analyses showed that cholesterol absorption markers predicted higher HDL-cholesterol levels, while HOMA-IR was a negative predictor of sitosterol and BMI a positive predictor of lathosterol.. Our findings suggest the occurrence of an increased cholesterol synthesis in FCH, and an increased cholesterol absorption in pH. Markers of cholesterol synthesis cluster with clinical and laboratory markers of obesity and insulin resistance.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Biomarkers; Case-Control Studies; Cholesterol; Female; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Humans; Hypercholesterolemia; Hyperlipidemia, Familial Combined; Intestinal Absorption; Italy; Linear Models; Male; Middle Aged; Multifactorial Inheritance; Multivariate Analysis; Phytosterols; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Sitosterols; Sterols; Young Adult

2012
Familial combined hyperlipidemia is associated with alterations in the cholesterol synthesis pathway.
    Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology, 2010, Volume: 30, Issue:1

    Familial combined hyperlipidemia (FCH) is a common familial lipid disorder characterized by increases in plasma total cholesterol, triglyceride, and apolipoprotein B-100 levels. In light of prior metabolic and genetic research, our purpose was to ascertain whether FCH cases had significant abnormalities of plasma markers of cholesterol synthesis and absorption as compared to unaffected kindred members.. Plasma levels of squalene, desmosterol, and lathosterol (cholesterol synthesis markers) and campesterol, sitosterol, and cholestanol (cholesterol absorption markers) were measured by gas-liquid chromatography in 103 FCH patients and 240 normolipidemic relatives (NLR). Squalene, desmosterol, and lathosterol levels were 6% (0.078), 31%, (P<0.001) and 51% (P<0.001) higher in FCH as compared to NLR, and these differences were especially pronounced in women. An interaction with obesity was also noted for a subset of these markers. We did not observe any apparent differences for the cholesterol absorption markers among FCH patients and NLR.. Our data indicate that both men and women with FCH have alterations in the cholesterol synthesis pathway, resulting in 51% higher levels of lathosterol (and additionally desmosterol in women). Plasma levels of the cholesterol precursor sterol squalene were only slightly increased (6%), suggesting enhanced conversion of squalene to lathosterol in this disorder.

    Topics: Adult; Aged; Biomarkers; Cholestanol; Cholesterol; Desmosterol; Female; Humans; Hyperlipidemia, Familial Combined; Intestinal Absorption; Male; Middle Aged; Phytosterols; Sex Characteristics; Sitosterols; Squalene

2010
Plasma non-cholesterol sterols: a useful diagnostic tool in pediatric hypercholesterolemia.
    Pediatric research, 2010, Volume: 67, Issue:2

    Current guidelines strongly recommend the identification of genetic forms of hypercholesterolemia (HC) during childhood.The usefulness of non-cholesterol sterols (NCS) in the diagnosis of genetic HC has not been fully explored. Plasma NCS were measured by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) in 113 children with hypercholesterolemia affected by: autosomal dominant hypercholesterolemia (ADH), familial combined hyperlipidemia(FCHL), polygenic hypercholesterolemia (PHC), and in 79 controls to evaluate: i) plasma NCS profile in different genetic HC and ii) the usefulness of NCS for the diagnosis of HC beyond current clinical criteria. ADH was characterized by raised lathosterol/total cholesterol (TC) and reduced phytosterols/TC ratios, indicative of increased cholesterol synthesis. FCHL showed a slight increase of lathosterol/TC ratio, whereas PHC showed increased phytosterols/TC ratios, indicative of increased cholesterol absorption. In a post hoc discriminant analysis of patients with HC, lipid values correctly classified the 73% (14 of 19) of ADH, whereas the inclusion of plasma sterols allowed the correct identification of all 19 patients with ADH. FCHL was not differentiated from PHC (62 versus 69%).In conclusion, NCS measurement showed that cholesterol plasma levels are related to the cholesterol synthesis in ADH and to cholesterol absorption in PHC. NCS improve the detection of ADH in pediatric patients, whereas FCHL diagnosis is not improved.

    Topics: Adolescent; Biomarkers; Case-Control Studies; Child; Cholesterol; Discriminant Analysis; Female; Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry; Genetic Predisposition to Disease; Humans; Hyperlipidemia, Familial Combined; Hyperlipoproteinemia Type II; Italy; Male; Multifactorial Inheritance; Phytosterols; Predictive Value of Tests; Sitosterols; Sterols

2010