Abstract

Among 31 nonobese or obese patients with endogenous hypertriglyceridemia, hepatic steatosis was found by histologic examination of the biopsied specimen in 17 patients, and it was severe in six patients. They had no history of excessive alcohol intake. Chemical analysis revealed that the lipid accumulated in the liver was triglyceride. The hypertriglyceridemic patients, with or without histologic steatosis, showed significantly increased responses of both plasma insulin and blood glucose to oral glucose load compared with control subjects. The responses were more exaggerated in the hypertriglyceridemic patients with steatosis than in the hypertriglyceridemic patients without steatosis. Analysis of correlations between five variables (liver triglyceride, plasma insulin, blood glucose, body weight index, and serum triglyceride) was done on 15 subjects whose liver triglyceride values were quantified, and highly significant correlations were found between liver triglyceride and plasma insulin, blood glucose, or body weight index. A stepwise multiple regression analysis performed on the five variables with liver triglyceride as the dependent variable revealed that the plasma insulin level was the most closely related variable, and the blood glucose level the next. The prediction equation for liver triglyceride as a function of plasma insulin and blood glucose levels ( r = 0.91, p < 0.001) accounted for 84% of the total variance of liver triglyceride. It was shown that the decay of intravenously injected insulin in plasma was not delayed in the hypertriglyceridemic patients with steatosis, while the insulin sensitivity examined after intravenous insulin injection significantly decreased in the hypertriglyceridemic patients with or without steatosis, thus suggesting that the hyperinsulinemia in the hypertriglyceridemic patients was due to an increased insulin secretion associated with the decrease in the insulin sensitivity. Therefore, the elevated plasma insulin and blood glucose levels—or the insulin insensitivity by itself—might be the essential abnormalities in patients with endogenous hypertriglyceridemia, which, in extreme cases, might lead to massive triglyceride accumulation in the liver.

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