Background: Tangier disease (TD) is the phenotypic expression of rare familial syndromes with mutations in the ABCA1 transporter. TD results in extremely low high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and reduced low density lipoprotein cholesterol, with normal or mildly increased fasting triglyceride (TG) concentrations. Although there is a close relation between HDL cholesterol values and atherogenesis, the risk of coronary artery disease is variable in TD. Raised fasting or postprandial TG values frequently accompany low HDL cholesterol and can add to the risk of a vascular event. Aims: To investigate the postprandial TG response in TD. Patients and methods: Five patients (three homozygotes (HTD) and two heterozygotes (hTD)) from one family were studied. One was defined by DNA analysis as homozygous for a new mutation (C2033A) resulting in truncation of the ABCA1 protein. Their TG concentrations were measured before and four, six, and eight hours after a standardised fat load and compared with a control group. Results: Two patients with HTD had high fasting TG concentrations. The third patient with HTD, the two with hTD, and the control group had TG concentrations within the reference range. The patients with HTD had increased postprandial peak TG values when compared with those with hTD and controls. Conclusion: Patients with HTD, with or without fasting hypertriglyceridaemia, may have an increased TG response to a fatty meal. The small number of patients does not allow definitive conclusions to be made. However, postprandial hypertriglyceridaemia could be a reason why some patients with TD develop premature atherosclerosis.
Women with hFH tend to have an abnormal TG response to a fatty meal after the menopause. Fasting TG levels may be able to predict the abnormal response to a fatty meal.
Familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) is associated with premature coronary heart disease (CHD). Post-prandial hypertriglyceridaemia has also been associated with cardiovascular disease. Thus, an abnormal post-prandial triglyceride (TG) clearance may contribute to the heterogeneity in the risk of CHD in heterozygous (h) FH. Therefore, we investigated the response of TG levels to a fatty meal in men with hFH. We studied 26 Greek men divided into two groups: the hFH group of 14 men, mean age 39 (SD = 11) years and the control group of 12 healthy men, mean age 43 (50:5) years. An increased TG response to the fatty meal was defined as a post-prandial TG concentration (at 4, 6 or 8 h) greater than the highest TG concentration in any hour in any control individual. All hFH patients had normal baseline fasting TG levels. However, seven hFH men showed an abnormal TG response after the fatty meal; these patients had higher baseline fasting TG levels than others [1.5 (0.2) vs. 1.0 (0.4) mmol/l, p = 0.005]. The hFH men constituted a heterogeneous group regarding their TG response to the fatty meal compared with healthy men because 50% with higher, but nevertheless 'normal' basal TG levels, had an abnormal post-prandial TG response. The reduced activity of low-density lipoprotein receptors in hFH together with other defects in TG handling may explain the abnormal rise of TG levels post-prandially.
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