Low‐density lipoprotein subfraction profiles in dialysis patients

2007 
Uraemic dyslipidaemia is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease in end-stage renal failure patients. In patients without renal failure, high levels and qualitative abnormalities of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) are known to be atherogenic. Recently, LDL subfraction analysis has associated premature coronary artery disease with a high prevalence of small, dense LDL particles characterizing the LDL subclass phenotype B. We therefore examined the lipid profiles, LDL subfraction distribution and phenotypes in our population of haemodialysis (HD; n = 30) and peritoneal dialysis patients (PD; n = 17), and compared them to 40 asymptomatic, non-uraemic volunteers. Dialysis patients had significantly higher triglyceride and VLDL cholesterol concentrations and lower HDL cholesterol and smaller LDL peak particle diameters. PD patients had significantly higher total cholesterol, glycated haemoglobin and fasting blood glucose levels with smaller LDL peak particle diameters (24.4 [0.1] vs 24.8 [0.1 nm] than HD. Both groups showed significant negative correlations between plasma triglyceride and LDL peak particle diameter, and positive correlations between HDL cholesterol and LDL peak particle diameter. All the PD patients expressed the B phenotype (LDL peak diameter ≤25.5 nm) compared to 73% of HD patients. This study demonstrates that HD and especially PD patients have atherogenic lipid profiles which are associated with a predominance of small dense LDL particles and the highly atherogenic LDL subclass phenotype B.
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