Relationship between acute diarrhoea and low plasma levels of vitamin A and retinol binding protein |
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Authors: | G Velasquez-Melendez MJ Roncada J Toporovski ET Okani D Wilson |
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Affiliation: | Department of Clinical Pharmacology, University of Bonn, Germany. |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVE: We studied possible sex differences of the effect of fenofibrate on serum lipoproteins. Twenty-three patients with primary hypercholesterolaemia (10 postmenopausal women and 13 aged-matched men) were treated with slow-release fenofibrate for 96 weeks. RESULTS: Steady state lipoprotein concentrations were reached after 12 and 24 weeks of treatment in women and men, respectively. During the subsequent follow-up the lipoprotein concentrations remained constant. In women total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol decreased from 299 to 234 mg.dl-1 and from 210 to 151 mg.dl-1, respectively, and in men from 265 to 233 mg.dl-1 and from 192 to 160 mg.dl-1. The decrease in triglycerides was also more pronounced in women (-42%) than in men (-18%). High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol increased significantly in women from 53 to 63 mg.dl-1 but not in men (45 to 50 mg.dl-1). Since the changes in LDL and HDL cholesterol occurred in opposite directions, the decrease in LDL/HDL cholesterol ratio was accentuated in both groups. However, this ratio was decreased almost twofold in women (-41%) compared to men (-23%). Although the serum concentrations of fenofibric acid were 1.3-fold higher in women than in men, which was probably due to the higher body weight in men (1.2-fold), this difference can hardly explain the favorable effect on lipoproteins in women. CONCLUSION: The present study indicates that fenofibrate might be very effective by reducing the concentrations of atherogenic lipoproteins in postmenopausal women. |
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