Chronic low-dose lipid infusion in healthy patients induces markers of endothelial activation independent of its metabolic effects. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Elevated plasma triglyceride/free fatty acid (FFA) levels and insulin resistance may promote atherosclerosis through endothelial activation (ie, increased expression of intercellular adhesion molecule 1 [ICAM-1]/vascular adhesion molecule 1 [VCAM-1], and endothelin-1 [ET-1]) in patients with the metabolic syndrome, but this has never been directly tested. The authors measured endothelial activation and insulin sensitivity (euglycemic insulin clamp with [3-(3)H]-glucose) after a 4-day low-dose lipid infusion that elevated plasma FFA to levels observed in the metabolic syndrome in 20 lean, non-diabetic insulin-resistant subjects with a strong family history of type 2 diabetes mellitus (FH(+)) and 10 insulin-sensitive volunteers without a family history of type 2 diabetes mellitus (FH(-)). Low-dose lipid infusion reduced insulin sensitivity by approximately 25% in insulin-sensitive FH(-)controls but did not worsen preexisting insulin resistance in FH(+). Low-dose lipid infusion elevated plasma ICAM and VCAM levels similarly in both groups (approximately 12%-18%; P<.01 vs baseline), while plasma ET-1 levels increased more in FH(+)vs FH(-)(46% vs 10%; P=.005). Increased plasma FFA levels closely correlated with elevated ICAM (r=0.60; P<.01), VCAM, and ET-1 levels (r=0.39 and r=0.42, respectively; P<.05). Low-dose lipid infusion induces endothelial activation in both lean insulin-resistant (FH(+)) and insulin-sensitive (FH(-)) healthy patients, regardless of changes in insulin sensitivity. These results prove that even a modest lipid oversupply may be sufficient to trigger a deleterious endothelial response.

publication date

  • January 1, 2008

Research

keywords

  • Biomarkers
  • Endothelin-1
  • Endothelium, Vascular
  • Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-1
  • Lipids
  • Metabolic Syndrome
  • Vascular Cell Adhesion Molecule-1

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 58249083549

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/j.1559-4572.2008.00013.x

PubMed ID

  • 18983329

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 3

issue

  • 3