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Review [Selective cholesterol absorption inhibition as a new prospect in treatment of hypercholesterolemia] 2005
Lima J, Fonollosa V, Chacón P. · Unidad de Lípidos, Servicio de Medicina Interna, Hospital General Vall d'Hebron, 08035 Barcelona, España. · Med Clin (Barc). · Pubmed #15960941 No free full text.
Abstract: Ezetimibe is the first of a new class of lipid-lowering drugs, the 2-azetidinones, which selectively inhibits the absorption of intestinal cholesterol. Ezetimibe's mechanism of action complements that of cholesterol synthesis inhibitors. Ezetimibe as monotherapy or in combination with statins significantly decreases plasma cLDL levels. As monotherapy, ezetimibe is well tolerated with a side-effect profile similar to placebo, whereas in combination with statins no differences in the incidence of myopathy, rhabdomyolysis or elevated liver enzymes are reported.
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Clinical Conference Effects of hypolipidemic treatment on serum markers of vascular inflammation in dyslipidemic men. 2003
Hernández C, Lecube A, Barberá G, Chacón P, Lima J, Simó R. · Endocrinology Division, Hospital General Vall d'Hebron, Barcelona, Spain. · Med Sci Monit. · Pubmed #12640339 No free full text.
Abstract: BACKGROUND: The purpose of our study was to assess the effect of hypolipidemiant drugs on serum markers of vascular inflammation (E-Selectin, VCAM-1 and MCP-1) in dyslipidemic men without cardiovascular disease. MATERIAL/METHODS: 84 dyslipidemic men were consecutively recruited from the Lipid Unit of a tertiary hospital. The patients were placed on statins (n=44) or fibrates (n=22), depending on the lipid profile, for 4 months. In the control group (n=18), a hypolipidemiant diet alone was indicated. RESULTS: Baseline levels of VCAM-1 and MCP-1 were not correlated with the lipid profile. By contrast, baseline E-Selectin levels correlated directly with glucose and triglyceride levels, and negatively with HDL-C. In multiple regression analysis, HDL-C and glucose concentrations independently influenced E-selectin levels. After treatment, we observed a significant decrease of E-Selectin levels in patients treated with statins, and the changes in E-Selectin levels were inversely associated with HDL-C variations. We did not observe any changes in VCAM-1 levels after the treatment regime we used. Regarding MCP-1, a significant increase was detected in the patients receiving fibrates. In addition, the percentage increment of MCP-1 was higher in patients treated with gemfibrozil than in patients who received bezafibrate. CONCLUSIONS: We observed a reduction in E-Selectin levels after statin therapy. This finding was associated with increased HDL-C. Fibrates, especially gemfibrozil, increased MCP-1 concentrations. This deleterious effect was unrelated to changes in lipid profile, and may help explain why fibrates have less impact than statins in reducing cardiovascular disease.
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Clinical Conference Effect of atorvastatin and bezafibrate on plasma levels of C-reactive protein in combined (mixed) hyperlipidemia. 2002
Gómez-Gerique JA, Ros E, Oliván J, Mostaza JM, Vilardell M, Pintó X, Civeira F, Hernández A, da Silva PM, Rodriguez-Botaro A, Zambón D, Lima J, Díaz C, Aristegui R, Sol JM, Chaves J, Hernández G, Anonymous00025. · Biochemistry Service, Fundación Jiménez Díaz, Avda. Reyes Católicos, 2, 28040, Madrid, Spain. · Atherosclerosis. · Pubmed #11996943 No free full text.
Abstract: C-reactive protein (CRP) is a non-specific but sensitive marker of underlying systemic inflammation. High CRP plasma levels correlate with risk for future cardiovascular events. The present study evaluated the effects of atorvastatin (10-40 mg) and bezafibrate (400 mg) on CRP concentrations after 6 and 12 months of treatment in 103 patients with combined (mixed) hyperlipidemia. The number of cardiovascular risk factors present in a given patient was associated with baseline CRP levels. After 6 months and 1 year, atorvastatin treatment was associated with significant (P<0.001) decreases from baseline of CRP concentrations by 29 and 43%, respectively, while bezafibrate-treated patients showed non-significant reductions of 2.3 and 14.6%, respectively (P=0.056 and 0.005 for the respective differences between the two treatment arms at 6 months and 1 year). The magnitude of change in CRP after 1 year was directly related to baseline CRP levels. Covariance analysis showed that CRP decreases in the atorvastatin group were unrelated to total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol reductions; however, they were directly related to triglyceride changes (r=0.28, P=0.047) and inversely related to HDL cholesterol changes (r=-0.28, P=0.045). A model including baseline CRP values and treatment effect showed that atorvastatin use was a significant predictor of change in CRP levels over time (beta=0.82, P=0.023). These results suggest a potential anti-atherosclerotic additional benefit of atorvastatin in patients at a risk of cardiovascular disease.
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