Acute hypertriglyceridaemia in humans increases the triglyceride content and decreases the anti-inflammatory capacity of high density lipoproteins

2009 
Abstract Introduction Post-prandial hypertriglyceridaemia is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, although the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. High density lipoproteins (HDL) have been shown to be atheroprotective, in part through attenuation of vascular inflammation. In this study, the influence of acute hypertriglyceridaemia on the composition and anti-inflammatory properties of HDL was investigated. Methods Eight fasting healthy male subjects (34±2 years) received 20% Intralipid™ (15mg/kg/h) or saline, on separate occasions in random order. At baseline and 60min post-infusion, the total HDL fraction was isolated and its chemical composition determined. HDL were added to TNF-α stimulated human coronary artery endothelial cells and VCAM-1 and ICAM-1 expression was determined by flow cytometry. Results Serum triglyceride (97.4±8.5mg/dL baseline, 283.2±35.4mg/dL post-infusion, p p p =0.01; %ICAM-1 expression 94±1 post-saline, 99.4±0.6 post-Intralipid™, p R =0.70, p =0.005); as well as between plasma triglyceride levels and both VCAM-1 ( R =0.71, p R =0.80, p Conclusion Acute hypertriglyceridaemia, simulating the post-prandial state, results in triglyceride-rich HDL with impaired anti-inflammatory capacity.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    35
    References
    74
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []