| Literature DB >> 28405227 |
Marília Izar Helfenstein Fonseca1, Isis Tande da Silva2, Sandra Roberta G Ferreira1,2.
Abstract
Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in women at advanced age, who are affected a decade later compared to men. Cardiovascular risk factors in women are not properly investigated nor treated and events are frequently lethal. Both menopause and type 2 diabetes substantially increase cardiovascular risk in the female sex, promoting modifications on lipid metabolism and circulating lipoproteins. Lipoprotein subfractions suffer a shift after menopause towards a more atherogenic lipid profile, consisted of hypertriglyceridemia, lower levels of both total high density lipoprotein (HDL) and its subfraction HDL2, but also higher levels of HDL3 and small low-density lipoprotein particles. This review discusses the impact of diabetes and menopause to the lipid profile, challenges in lipoprotein subfractions determination and their potential contribution to the cardiovascular risk assessment in women. It is still unclear whether lipoprotein subfraction changes are a major driver of cardiometabolic risk and which modifications are predominant. Prospective trials with larger samples, methodological standardizations and pharmacological approaches are needed to clarify the role of lipoprotein subfractions determination on cardiovascular risk prediction and intervention planning in postmenopausal women, with or without DM.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular risk; Diabetes mellitus; Lipoprotein subfractions; Menopause; Women
Year: 2017 PMID: 28405227 PMCID: PMC5384156 DOI: 10.1186/s13098-017-0221-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetol Metab Syndr ISSN: 1758-5996 Impact factor: 3.320
Summary of main advantages and disadvantages of methods for lipoprotein subfractions determination
| Method | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Analytic ultracentrifugation | Precision and reproducibility | Unfeasible for clinical practice, due to low availability high cost and time consuming |
| Vertical auto profile-II | Simple procedures and high sensitivity | Low correlation to NMR and electrophoresis |
| Gradient gel electrophoresis | Determination of LDL and HDL size distribution directly from blood samples | Accuracy depends on correct standards and quality control |
| Linear polyacrylamide gel | Useful for clinical labs since it is simple and fast | High cost |
| Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy | No need of physically separation of the subfractions and fast procedure | Dependent of mathematical assumptions |
| Immunoaffinity chromatography/ion mobility | Ability to isolate two HDL subfractions | Low availability and scarce data regarding efficiency |
References: [58–77]
Fig. 1Main characteristics of structural and functional abnormalities of lipid metabolism during atherogenic process and aging and the impact of diabetes mellitus