Atherogenesis in the white carneau pigeon: Further studies of the role of carbon monoxide and dietary cholesterol

1979 
Abstract Two experiments are decribed. In the first, 3 pairs of groups of 20 female White Carneau pigeons were fed on diets containing 0.5%, 1% or 2% cholesterol. Birds in one group from each pair were exposed to 150 ppm carbon monoxide (CO) for 6 h on 5 days of each week for 52 weeks, sufficient to raise their carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb) levels to approximately 10%, while those in the other group were sham-exposed under similar conditions. In the second experiment, 3 groups of 40 female pigeons were each fed on a diet containing 1% cholesterol, one group being exposed to CO to give COHb levels of 20%, one to give COHb levels of 10% and one being sham-exposed. In addition, 20 birds in the second experiment were fed on the 1% cholesterol diet but were neither exposed to CO nor sham-exposed. Cholesterol enriched diets caused mean plasma cholesterol values in each group to rise sharply within 4 weeks of starting them, but the levels reached were as high with diets containing 0.5% cholesterol as for diets containing 1% or 2% added cholesterol. Exposure to CO increased plasma and aortic cholesterol levels, though this increase was only statistically significant for aortic levels in the second experiment. In both experiments combined exposure to the 1% cholesterol diet and CO resulted in a significant decrease in aortic triglyceride content. The incidence and severity of coronary artery atherosclerosis was associated with increasing dietary cholesterol. It was also associated with exposure to CO in birds given 0.5% or 1%, but not 2%, dietary cholesterol; the increase in birds given 1% was related to the dose of CO. Possible mechanisms are discussed for this effect of CO, which is not found in normally fed birds.
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