Lipoprotein X in a patient with cholestasis and hypertriglyceridaemia

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Abstract

Hypertriglyceridaemia is an established cause of acute pancreatitis and responds to insulin therapy in addition to lipid lowering medication. We report a case of severe hypertriglycaeridemia of 149 mmol/L in a 36-year-old man with type 2 diabetes who presented to the surgical ward with abdominal pain due to pancreatitis and developed acute cholestasis, jaundice and eruptive xanthomata. His triglycerides improved to 3.8 mmol/L with sliding scale insulin within two weeks of in-hospital stay. However, his total cholesterol remained raised at 23.7 mmol/L. The lipoprotein electrophoresis confirmed the presence of lipoprotein X associated with bile obstruction, which contributed to an increase in total cholesterol. The total cholesterol normalized on improvement of his cholestasis.

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Stepien, K. M., Divyateja, H., Ahmed, F., Prinsloo, P., & Gupta, P. (2013). Lipoprotein X in a patient with cholestasis and hypertriglyceridaemia. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry, 50(2), 173–175. https://doi.org/10.1258/acb.2012.012148

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