A review of combined hyperlipidaemia and its treatment with fenofibrate |
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Authors: | H R Superko |
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Affiliation: | Stanford University Lipid Research Clinic, Stanford University School of Medicine, California 94305. |
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Abstract: | Approximately 15% of myocardial infarction survivors less than 60 years of age have a plasma lipid abnormality defined as combined hyperlipidaemia. Patients with this condition are at substantial risk for future cardiovascular events. Combined hyperlipidaemia involves elevations in both plasma triglycerides and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol and may share similarities with hyperapolipoproteinaemia, LDL-pattern B and the small LDL-pattern. Treatment is directed at reduction of LDL-cholesterol and plasma triglyceride values. Nicotinic acid and the fibric acid derivatives are useful therapeutic agents. Fenofibrate is a fibric acid derivative that lowers both triglycerides and LDL-cholesterol in combined hyperlipidaemia. In combined hyperlipidaemia, fenofibrate has been shown to reduce significantly plasma triglycerides by approximately 40%, LDL-cholesterol by 6%, and to increase high-density lipoprotein cholesterol by 15%. Apoproteins are favourably altered with increases in apoprotein-A, decreases in apoprotein-E and inconsistent decreases in apoprotein-B. Fenofibrate is well tolerated with primarily dermatological side-effects. |
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