Abstract

We compared the effects of Intralipid and dextrose infusion on plasma lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT), plasma lipid profiles and lipolytic activity. We used 5-week-old male Sprague-Dawley rats which were given total parenteral nutrition (TPN) with either Intralipid (3 g/kg body weight) or an equicaloric amount of 25% dextrose in the presence or absence of heparin (1 or 10 IU/ml of TPN). 40 min after the end of 4 h of infusion, plasma LCAT activity was significantly decreased ( P < 0.001), while total cholesterol and free fatty acid levels were significantly ( P < 0.005) increased in rats given Intralipid as compared to those given dextrose. We found associations ( P < 0.005) between LCAT activity and total cholesterol and between LCAT and free fatty acid levels; the coefficients of negative correlation were 0.543 and 0.607, respectively. Concomitantly to the increment in plasma total cholesterol levels, there was a decrease in the high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol fraction; the latter, which was 40% of the total plasma cholesterol in control and dextrose-infused rats, declined to 9% in rats given Intralipid. Administration of heparin during Intralipid infusion, even up to 10 IU/ml of TPN, did not affect any of these changes. After dextrose infusion, the values of all three parameters were similar to those of the control group. Plasma lipolytic activity was not significantly different between rate given infusion (Intralipid or dextrose) and controls. However, in the presence of heparin, plasma lipolytic activity increased similarly in both infused groups. These data indicate that in young rats, Intralipid infusion leads to an increase in plasma total cholesterol and free fatty acid levels, which correlates with a decrease in LCAT activity; the concurrent decrease in HDL cholesterol levels might account, in part, for the loss of LCAT activity. The administration of heparin results in an elevation of plasma lipolytic activity; however, it does not prevent the hypercholesterolemia, nor the decline in LCAT activity associated with Intralipid infusion.

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