Plasma lipoproteins and LCAT activity were studied using a single spin density gradient separation and an exogenous substrate enzyme assay in 41 patients on chronic hemodialysis and in 11 normal subjects. The plasma HDL cholesterol was markedly decreased (33 vs. 63 mg/dl, P < 0.001) while total and LDL-cholesterol were unchanged in the patients. Plasma LCAT activity was significantly lower in the patient group (42 vs. 59 nmoles/4 hr/ml, P < 0.001), but the distribution of activity (studied in 13 dialysis patients and 12 control subjects) was not different between the two groups: 90% being associated with HDL and VHDL lipoprotein fractions. To examine the possible genetic influence on the development of hypertriglyceridemia in the patient group, we examined the ratio of apolipoproteins E3/E2 and CII/CIII in ten of the patients and another group of 13 control subjects. The frequency of heterozygotes for E3 deficiency was not different between the patient (one of ten) and the control (two of 13) groups. While the patient group had lower CII/CIII ratio, the figures did not reach statistical significance. The low LCAT activity in the face of higher plasma triglycerides and low HDL may contribute to impaired lipolysis previously documented in uremic patients. A follow-up study performed 1 year after the initial study confirmed the decreased HDL (51 vs. 71 mg/dl, P < 0.01) and LCAT activity (50 vs. 59 nmoles/hr/ml, P < 0.02) in an exogenous substrate system (N = 20). LCAT measured using the endogenous substrate was not significantly different from the control group (49 vs. 55 nmoles/hr/ml). Changes in LCAT activity induced by a single dialysis were not significant in either assay system.
CITATION STYLE
McLeod, R., Reeve, C. E., & Frohlich, J. (1984). Plasma lipoproteins and lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase distribution in patients on dialysis. Kidney International, 25(4), 683–688. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1984.74
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