Prevalence of diabetes was high across all three ethnic groups. Ethnic differences in prevalence of diabetes, insulin resistance, central obesity, hypertension, smoking, and lipid profile could explain the differential coronary heart disease rates in the three major ethnic groups in Singapore.
VLDL1, VLDL2, IDL, and LDL and its subfractions (LDL-I, LDL-II, and LDL-III) were quantified in 304 normolipemic subjects together with postheparin plasma lipase activities, waist/hip ratio, fasting insulin, and glucose. Concentrations of VLDL1 and VLDL2 rose as plasma triglycerides (TGs) increased across the normal range, but the association of plasma TGs with VLDL1 showed a steeper slope than that of VLDL2 (P < .001). Plasma TG level was the most important determination of LDL subfraction distribution. The least dense species, LDL-I, decreased as the level of this plasma lipid rose in the population. LDL-II in both men and women exhibited a positive association with plasma TG level in the range 0.5 to 1.3 mmol/L, increasing from about 100 to 200 mg/dL. In contrast, within this TG range the LDL-III concentration was low (approximately equal to 30 mg/dL) and changed little. As plasma TGs rose from 1.3 to 3.0 mmol/L there was a significant fall in LDL-II concentration in men (r = .45, P < .001) but not in women (r = .1, NS). Conversely, above the TG threshold of 1.3 mmol/L there was a steeper rise in LDL-III concentrations in men than in women (P < .001); 42% of the men had and LDL-III in the range associated with high risk of heart disease ( > 100 mg lipoprotein/dL plasma) compared with only 17% of the women. Other influences on the LDL subfraction profile were the activities of lipases and parameters indicative of the presence of insulin resistance. Men on average had twice the hepatic lipase activity of women. This enzyme was not strongly associated with variation in the LDL subfraction profile in men, but in women it was correlated with LDL-III (r = 39, P = .001) and remained a significant predictor in multivariate analysis. Increased waist/hip ratio, fasting insulin, and glucose were correlated negatively with LDL-I and positively with LDL-III, primarily, at least in the case of LDL-III, through raising plasma TGs. On the basis of these cross-sectional observations we postulate the following model for the generation of LDL-III. Subjects develop elevated levels of large TG-rich VLDL1 for a number of reasons, including failure of insulin action. The increase in the concentration of VLDL1 expands the plasma TG pool, and this, via the action of cholesteryl ester transfer protein (which facilitates neutral lipid exchange between lipoprotein particles), promotes the net transfer of TGs into LDL-II, the major LDL species.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Intra-abdominal and retroperitoneal lymphangiomas are a rare, congenital malformations of the lymphatics, which are found predominantly in children. The aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical features of this tumor, highlighting the differences in adults and pediatric patients. We also evaluate the preoperative diagnosis, radiological features, surgical treatment, and outcome of this rare condition. Between 1990 and 2004, 14 patients who underwent surgical resection of an intra-abdominal lymphangioma were reviewed retrospectively. There were five pediatric patients between fetal age and 17 years of age and nine adults between 31 and 62 years of age. Overall, females outnumbered males in the series, with a male-to-female ratio of 3:4. However, males predominated in the pediatric age group with a male-to-female ratio of 1.5:1. The clinical presentation of children was more acute ranging from 3 days to 2 months. In adults, four patients were asymptomatic, and the remaining five had symptom duration ranging from 2 weeks to a year. The lymphangiomas occurred in the mesentery (n = 4), retroperitoneum (n = 4), omentum (n = 3), pancreas (n = 2), and spleen (n = 1). All the patients underwent total surgical resection with or without organ resection, and there were no recurrences at a median follow-up of 2 years (range; 3 months--13 years). This series demonstrates that abdominal lymphangiomas have a male preponderance and present more acutely in pediatric patients, whereas in adults, female patients predominate and the history is more chronic.
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