| Literature DB >> 22018353 |
Simone R B M Eussen1, Cathy J M Rompelberg, Olaf H Klungel, Jan C H van Eijkeren.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To examine the effects on LDL cholesterol of the combined use of statins and phytosterols/-stanols, in vivo studies and clinical trials are necessary. However, for a better interpretation of the experimental data as well as to possibly predict cholesterol levels given a certain dosing regimen of statins and phytosterols/-stanols a more theoretically based approach is helpful. This study aims to construct a mathematical model to simulate reductions in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol in persons who combine the use of statins with a high intake of phytosterols/-stanols, e.g. by the use of functional foods. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 22018353 PMCID: PMC3229468 DOI: 10.1186/1476-511X-10-187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lipids Health Dis ISSN: 1476-511X Impact factor: 3.876
Figure 1Simplified scheme of LDL cholesterol metabolism in humans. For detailed description of the model see text. The definition of the model variables are summarised in Table 1.
Model variables and abbreviations used in the study
| Model variable | Abbreviation |
|---|---|
| Endogenously produced cholesterol | |
| Dietary cholesterol intake | |
| External daily statin dose | |
| External daily free phytosterol/-stanol dose | |
| (Steady state) concentration of free cholesterol in the liver | |
| VLDL particles | |
| Absorbed cholesterol fraction | |
| Fraction of produced VLDL cholesterol that re-enters the liver | |
| Association rate of VLDL particles and free cholesterol to VLDL cholesterol | |
| Excretion of cholesterol from the cholesterol pool by bile | |
| Excretion of cholesterol through the formation of bile salts | |
| Reduction in cholesterol pool size | |
| Cholesterol pool concentration in absence of statins and phytosterols/-stanols | |
| Endogenous produced cholesterol in absence of statins and phytosterols/-stanols | |
| Uptake of dietary cholesterol in absence of statins and phytosterols/-stanols | |
| Absorbed cholesterol fraction in absence of statins and phytosterols/-stanols | |
| Reduction in endogenous cholesterol production | |
| Reduction in fraction of cholesterol uptake from the diet | |
| Ratio of exponential rates of different cholesterol elimination routes | |
| VLDL cholesterol production rate | |
| Transformation rate of VLDL cholesterol to LDL cholesterol | |
| (Steady state) VLDL cholesterol concentration | |
| Maximum rate of change in (V)LDL cholesterol due to saturated uptake process | |
| Michaelis-Menten constant in (V)LDL cholesterol model | |
| (Steady state) LDL cholesterol concentration | |
| LDL cholesterol production from VLDL cholesterol | |
| Clearance rate of LDL cholesterol through non-saturated process | |
| Maximal achievable reduction in endogenous cholesterol production | |
| Half maximum reduction statin dose | |
| Maximal achievable reduction in fraction of cholesterol uptake from the diet | |
| Half maximum reduction phytosterol/-stanol dose |
Figure 2Simulated dose-response relation between . Maximum inhibition is 97.8% and the concentration at half maximum inhibition is 1.64 (ng/ml). Solid symbols present data by Shum et al. [7]
Figure 3Simulated reduction (%) in LDL cholesterol after treatment with different doses of atorvastatin. The solid line shows the fit to the model and symbols represent experimental data from Berry et al. [21] Values for the Michaelis-Menten parameters are: effective maximum LDL cholesterol reduction (R) = 0.544 and half maximum reduction statin dose (S) = 6.7 mg/d. The dashed lines show the 5% and 95% uncertainty range in reduction obtained by correlated sampling (correlation coefficient ρ = 0.88) of Rand Sfrom their covariance matrix.
Figure 4Simulated reduction (%) in LDL cholesterol after treatment with different doses of phytosterols/-stanols. The solid line shows the fit to the model and symbols represent experimental data from Demonty et al. [22] Values for the Michaelis-Menten parameters are: effective maximum LDL cholesterol reduction (R) = 0.221 and half maximum reduction phytosterol/-stanol dose (PS) = 1.78 mg/d. The dashed lines show the 5% and 95% uncertainty range in reduction obtained by correlated sampling (correlation coefficient ρ = 0.98) of Rand PSfrom their covariance matrix.
Figure 5Simulated reduction (%) in LDL cholesterol after combined treatment with different doses of free phytosterols/-stanols and atorvastatin in humans. The lines from upper to lower show LDL cholesterol reduction for subjects that are exposed to no atorvastatin, or daily doses of 20, 40 or 80 mg atorvastatin, respectively.