Issues On Cholesterol: Diet, Statins And Genetics
Main Category: CholesterolAlso Included In: Nutrition / Diet; Statins; Genetics
Article Date: 01 Sep 2008 - 5:00 PDT
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Genetic lipoprotein disorders are frequently seen in patients with premature coronary artery disease (CAD). An example of strong genetic predisposition is the disorder: familial hypercholesterolemia, where a single gene defect (the low density lipoprotein receptor) contributes to most of the familial expression of CAD.
Conversely, lifestyle, diabetes, dyslipidemia, cigarette smoking and hypertension contribute to most of the population-attributable risk in the large, international INTERHEART study of acute myocardial infarction (heart attacks). The identification of single gene disorders may pave the way to a better understanding of complex metabolic pathways. Understanding the genes that regulate high density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism may lead to novel therapeutic approaches. This has been emphasized by two therapeutic approaches for the treatment of CAD:
- The infusion of apo AI containing proteoliposomes, using wild-type or a mutant form of apo AI, apo AIMilano, in patients with acute coronary syndromes;
- The long-term treatment of subjects with low HDL-C with the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) inhibitor Torcertapib. While Torcetrapib proved to have off-target toxic effects, two other CETP inhibitors (Anacetrapib and Delcetrapib) are being tested clinically. Experimentally, however, CETP inhibitors may not reduce atherosclerosis
Novel therapeutic approaches using agonists of the LxR/RxR pathway to up-regulate the ABCA1 transporter, or the transcriptional regulation of apo AI, are being explored.
Epidemiology of HDL and risk of coronary artery disease CAD risk
Plasma (or serum) level of HDL-C is a continuous and graded negative cardiovascular risk factor. Most international CAD prevention guidelines define HDL-C as a categorical risk factor and the absolute level of HDL-C is used in a multivariate model to predict cardiovascular risk and determine the need and intensity of preventive therapies. A low HDL-C is considered a diagnostic criterion for the metabolic syndrome.
To underlie the importance of plasma lipoproteins in the pathogenesis of CAD and acute myocardial infarction, the largest case-control study of myocardial infarction (INTERHEART) has shown that the apo B/apo AI ratio (respectively an index of atherogenic lipoproteins and protective lipoproteins) accounts for approximately half (49%) of the population-attributable risk of acute myocardial infarction. The prevalence of a low HDL-C in patients with CAD has been examined in several case-control and prospective studies. It is estimated that approximately 40% of patients with premature CAD have a low HDL-C and this represents the most common lipoprotein disorder in patients with CAD. Most patients with a low HDL-C have multiple cardiovascular risk factors and features of the metabolic syndrome, with obesity (predominantly abdominal), elevated plasma triglyceride levels, high blood pressure and hyperglycemia, insulin resistance or diabetes. Despite the strong association between metabolic disorders and HDL-C, plasma levels of HDL-C are strongly genetically determined. Experimental evidence shows that the atheroprotective effects of HDL are pleiotropic and extend beyond removing cholesterol from lipid-laden macrophages in the atherosclerotic plaque. HDL are known to have anti-inflammatory effects, to prevent oxidation of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), possess anti-thrombotic properties, modulate vasomotor tone and may improve endothelial cell survival (by preventing apoptosis), migration and proliferation. Nonetheless, the major cardio-protective effect of HDL has been attributed to its key role in reverse cholesterol transport, a process in which cholesterol from peripheral tissues such as foam cells is selectively returned to the liver for excretion in the bile. Mutations in any of the proteins regulating this complex metabolic pathway may potentially decrease HDL-C levels and accelerate CAD.
Mutations or polymorphisms in several genes have been associated with altered plasma HDL-C levels. Mutations in the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) gene are associated with increases in HDL-C whereas mutations in the apolipoprotein (apo) AI gene (the major apolipoprotein of HDL particles), or the lecithin:cholesterol acyl transferase (LCAT) gene cause a low HDL-C. Of the approximately 46 mutations affecting the structure of apo AI, not all are associated with CAD. Mutations in the lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic lipase (HL) genes also affect HDL-C levels. The identification of the ATP binding cassette A1 gene (ABCA1) as the cause of Tangier disease and familial HDL deficiency has led to a better understanding of the role of cellular cholesterol and phospholipid transport in the metabolism of nascent HDL particles. Based upon the analysis of a selected group of subjects, we estimate that approximately 10-20% of subjects with severe HDL deficiency have mutations of the ABCA1 gene. Other genes have been found in animal models to have a profound impact on HDL-C levels, although no human counterpart disorders have yet been identified.
Heritability of HDL-C
To examine the genetic contribution to the determination of HDL-C levels, there have been at least nine published studies in twins and 14 family studies. Estimates for the heritability of plasma HDL-C levels varies between 0.24 to 0.83 and is most often quoted as approximately 0.5.
Genetics of HDL and risk of cardiovascular disease
The inverse epidemiological association between serum levels of HDL-C and risk of CAD is graded and has been validated in multiple studies. However, there is remaining controversy whether a low HDL-C should not predominantly be considered a marker of poor lifestyle (obesity, lack of exercise, hypertriglyceridemia, diet, etc.), rather than a primary causal agent for atherosclerosis in the majority of the population. Specific mutations in genes affecting HDL-C levels have had considerable discordant effects on CAD risk. For instance, mutations in the apo AI gene affecting HDL-C levels can be strongly associated with premature CAD, but apo AIMilano and apo AIParis are notable exceptions. Mutations in the LCAT gene cause a marked decreased level of HDL-C but are not considered to be associated with CAD. While loss-of-function mutations in the CETP gene cause an elevated HDL-C, cardiovascular risk does not seem decreased and may in fact be increased. Mutations in ABCA1 are associated with very low HDL-C and increase cardiovascular risk 3.5 fold in one study, but more recent data from the Copenhagen Heart Study suggests that ABCA1 mutations are not associated with increase cardiovascular risk, despite being associated with a low HDL-C. Important questions therefore remain which genetic forms of HDL deficiency confer cardiovascular risk. This has implications for the identification and treatment of patients with HDL deficiency. It remains to be determined whether a genetic form of HDL deficiency confers cardiovascular risk.
Authors
Professor Jacques Genest
jacques.genest@mcgill.ca
Notes
This press release accompanies both a presentation and an ESC press conference given at the ESC Congress 2008. Written by the investigator himself/herself, this press release does not necessarily reflect the opinion of the European Society of Cardiology.
European Society of Cardiology
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Overlooking CAD Inherited Real Risk CAD Occurrence Will Continue!
posted by Sergio Stagnaro MD on 1 Sep 2008 at 5:54 amI find the paper really fascinating, and convincing. However, if you analize the "incipit" - Genetic lipoprotein disorders are frequently seen in patients with premature coronary artery disease (CAD)_ we realize easily that something is wrong. In fact, we must admitt that does really exists patient, involved by CAD, without cholesterol blood level elevated, and, on the contrary, individuals seriously dyslipidaemic without CAD (1-9). As a consequence, I cannot agree at all with the conclusion of the paper (1).
As a matter of fact every CAD well-known risk factor (about 300!!!) can participate in causing CAD exclusively in individuals involved by CAD Congenital Real Risk, I discovered (2-8). In fact, this article reveals that quantum-biophysical-semeiotic constitutions and related inherited real risk are overlooked, unfortunately (http://www.semeioticabiofisica.it). As far as CAD is concerned, notoriously coronary inherited real risk, as well as sub-clinical, and consequently very dangerous, coronary heart disease is very prevalent among indian individuals, independently associated with actually known risk of CAD , and substantially increases the risk (presence of newborn-pathological, type I, subtype b) aspecific, Endoarterial Blocking Devices in coronary small arteries, according to Hammersen), among patients with hypertension or diabetes mellitus. In following, I suggest - once again - an useful, reliable and easy clinical manoeuvre, that allows doctor to recognize both CAD Inherited Real Risk and silent CAD (2-4). This manoeuvre proved to be really useful in my 52-year-long clinical experience, also in order to the bed-side recognizing heart ischaemic disease before cardiac pathology occurs. Moreover, it is well known that patients with coronary artery disease (CAD) may have no symptoms at all for many years or decades and that the electrocardiographic features of ischaemia may be induced by exercise without accompaning angina (2). (For further information: See in my website http://www.semeioticabiofisica.it, Practical Applications). In other words, we need a clinical tool reliable in rapid detecting CAD, even clinically silent, initiating from CAD “congenital real risk”, doctor can now utilize in his day-to-day practice (2). I think surely that one method is "Myocardial Ischaemic Biophysical- Semeiotic Preconditioning", described elsewhere(2-4). From the tehnical viewpoint, doctor has to know, at least, the auscultatory percussion of the stomach, described even in old acŕdemic books of two last centuries (Rasario IX edition). Briefly, in health, digital pressure of mean intensity, applied upon heart cutaneous projection area, brings about the so-called gastric aspecific reflex (= in the stomach, fundus and body are dilated; on the contrary, antral-pyloric region contracts) after an age-dependent latency time of 8 sec., that lasts less than 4 sec. (= parameter value of paramount significance since it parallels the efficacy of coronary microvessel Microcirculatory Funcional Reserve).
A second, successive evaluation after an interval of 5 sec. exactly, provokes the identical reflex, but after lt. of 12 sec. or more: physiological myocardial preconditioning, typeI.
On the contrary, in patients involved by CAD, even silent, i.e. subclinical,latency time persists identical in both evaluations, or results clearly lower in the second one, in relation with disease seriousness: type II and respectively type III preconditioning. Of course, biophysical semeiotic preconditioning evaluation, really more complex than it appears in the above brief description, can be applied to all others biological systems, with favourable influences on primary prevention and diagnosis (2-8).
Finally, since November 2007, thanks to Quantum Biophysical Semeiotics, based on non local Realm, I demonstrated for the first time, besides the local realm, in biological systems (9-12), in only one second physicians can recognize clinically healthy heart, excluding CAD Congenital Real Risk, even in individuals kilometres away (13-15).
References
1) Simmons RK., Sharp S., et al. Evaluation of the Framingham Risk Score in the European Prospective Investigation of Cancer–Norfolk Cohort. Does Adding Glycated Hemoglobin Improve the Prediction of Coronary Heart Disease Events? Arch Intern Med. 2008;168(11):1209-1216.
2) Stagnaro-Neri M., Stagnaro S. Introduzione alla Semeiotica Biofisica. Il Terreno Oncologico. Ed. Travel Factory, Roma, 2004. http://www.travelfactory.it/
semeiotica_biofisica.htm
3) Stagnaro S., Stagnaro-Neri M., Le Costituzioni Semeiotico-Biofisiche.Strumento clinico fondamentale per la prevenzione primaria e la definizione della Single Patient Based Medicine. Travel Factory, Roma, 2004.
4)Stagnaro S. Epidemiological evidence for the non-random clustering of the components of the metabolic syndrome: multicentre study of the Mediterranean Group for the Study of Diabetes. Eur J Clin Nutr. 2007 Feb 7; [Medline]
5) Stagnaro S. Newborn-pathological Endoarteriolar Blocking Devices in Diabetic and Dislipidaemic Constitution and Diabetes Primary Prevention. The Lancet. March 06 2007. http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673607603316/comments?totalcomments=1
6) Stagnaro-Neri M., Stagnaro S., Deterministic Chaos, Preconditioning and Myocardial Oxygenation evaluated clinically with the aid of Biophysical Semeiotics in the Diagnosis of ischaemic Heart Disease even silent. Acta Med. Medit. 13, 109, 1997.
7) Stagnaro Sergio. Biophysical-Semeiotic Bed-Side Detecting CAD, even silent, and Coronary Calcification. 4to Congreso International de Cardiologia por Internet, 2005, http://www.fac.org.ar/ccvc/marcoesp/marcos.php.
8) Stagnaro Sergio. Role of Coronary Endoarterial Blocking Devices in Myocardial Preconditioning - c007i. Lecture, V Virtual International Congress of Cardiology. http://www.fac.org.ar/qcvc/llave/c007i/stagnaros.php
9) Stagnaro Sergio e Paolo Manzelli. Limiti della Medicina Ufficiale. L’Esperimento di Lory http://www.ilpungolo.com, 03 Gennaio 2008,
http://www.ilpungolo.com/leggi-tutto.asp?IDS=13&NWS=NWS5267
10) Stagnaro Sergio e Paolo Manzelli. L’Esperimento di Lory. Scienza e Conoscenza, N° 23, 13 Marzo 2008. http://www.scienzaeconoscenza.it//articolo.php?id=17775
11) Stagnaro Sergio. Il test Semeiotico-Biofisico della Osteocalcina nella prevenzione primaria del diabete mellito. http://www.fce.it Febbraio 2008. http://www.fcenews.it/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=909&Itemid=47
12) Stagnaro Sergio. La Diagnosi Clinica nella Semeiotica Biofisica Quantistica. http://www.fce.it 02-05-2008, http://www.fcenews.it/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1285&Itemid=47
13) Stagnaro Sergio. Role of NON-LOCAL Realm in Primary Prevention with Quantum Biophysical Semeiotics. http://www.nature.com, 01 Feb, 2008-05-17
http://www.nature.com/news/2008/080130/full/451511a.html
14) Stagnaro Sergio. Diagnosi clinica di cuore sano in un secondo! 7 Aprile 2008. http://www.fce.it http://www.fcenews.it/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1218&Itemid=4715) 15) Stagnaro Sergio. Semiotica Biofisica Quantistica: Diagnosi di Cuore sano in un Secondo in paziente distante 200 KM! http://www.fce.it, 07-05-2008
http://www.fcenews.it/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1316&Itemid=47
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