| Literature DB >> 2622856 |
L E DeForge1, S W Schwendner, M R DeGalan, D S McConnell, R E Counsell.
Abstract
In an effort to visualize whole body cholesteryl ester (CE) deposition using the nuclear medicine imaging technique of gamma camera scintigraphy, 125I-cholesteryl iopanoate (125I-CI), a nonhydrolyzable CE analogue, was used as a marker for CE deposition in atherosclerotic New Zealand white rabbits. Groups of animals were fed either a cholesterol-enriched diet (2%, w/w) or the same diet supplemented with the hypolipidemic drugs colestipol (1%, w/w) and/or clofibrate (0.3%, w/w). Injections of 125I-CI were administered biweekly. At the end of 15 weeks, animals were scintigraphically scanned and sacrificed for tissue analysis. The results demonstrated that while drug treatment had no significant effect on plasma lipid levels, it substantially lessened atherosclerotic involvement in the thoracic-abdominal aorta. These differences in aortic lipid accumulation were reflected in the whole-body scans which showed a reduction in tissue accumulation of 125I-CI in the drug-treated groups. Gamma camera scintigraphy thus represents a rapid means of visualizing tissue CE accumulation which could facilitate the evaluation of lipid-lowering drug efficacy and possible antiatherosclerotic effect.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2622856 DOI: 10.1023/a:1015918202142
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Res ISSN: 0724-8741 Impact factor: 4.200