| Literature DB >> 17709109 |
Dmitri Sviridov1, Anh Hoang, Esther Ooi, Gerald Watts, P H R Barrett, Paul Nestel.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The effects of the statin, rosuvastatin on indices of reverse cholesterol transport were studied in a randomized, placebo-controlled, cross-over trial in 25 overweight subjects with defined metabolic syndrome. RESULT: Four weeks' treatment with 40 mg/day rosuvastatin significantly reduced levels of plasma cholesterol (44%), LDL cholesterol (60%) and triglyceride (38%). HDL cholesterol (mean [S.D.]) rose (0.97[0.17] to 1.05[0.17]mmol/L; P<0.05) and the LpA-I component of HDL from 39[7] to 45[9]mg/dL (P<0.05). LCAT activity fell (0.55[0.13] to 0.35[0.07]nmol/mL/h; P<0.05); CETP activity and mass fell from 89[13] to 80[11]nmol//L/h and from 1.66[0.57] to 1.28[0.41]mug/mL respectively, (P<0.05). Cholesterol efflux in vitro (to plasmas from THP-1 activated cells) fell from 7.1[1.8]% (placebo) to 6.2[1.7]% (rosuvastatin); P<0.05, but when plasmas depleted of apoB lipoproteins were studied, the difference in efflux was no longer statistically significant. During placebo efflux was paradoxically inversely correlated with HDL-C (P=0.016) and LpA-I (P=0.035) concentrations but these correlations were absent after rosuvastatin.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17709109 DOI: 10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2007.07.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Atherosclerosis ISSN: 0021-9150 Impact factor: 5.162