Abstract

We studied 11 female alcoholics before and after ethanol withdrawal of 2 weeks and 10 healthy normolipidaemic, nonalcoholic women of similar age. In alcoholic women the HDL2 mass was increased by 63% (P < 0.01) on admission and normalized (P < 0.01) during abstention. The concentrations of HDL3 cholesterol and its mass remained unchanged throughout the study. Consistently with the fall of HDL2 gradient gel electrophoresis analyses also demonstrated decrease of the cholesterol concentration of HDL2b and HDL2a (P < 0.05) during alcohol withdrawal. On admission the apo A-II concentration was increased by 48% (P < 0.01) and it was normalized (P < 0.001) during abstention. Among apo A-I containing lipoproteins the most prominent change occurred in Lp A-I:A-II, which fell by 32% (P < 0.01) during 1 week's alcohol withdrawal. During abstention the lipoprotein (a) concentration increased in 10 out of 11 women. In patients cholesteryl ester transfer (CETP) activity increased by 35% (P < 0.01) during 1 week of ethanol withdrawal. On admission postheparin plasma lipoprotein (LPL) and hepatic lipase activities were increased by 25% (P = NS); during 1 week's abstention they both returned to the control level (P < 0.05- < 0.01). In conclusion, chronic alcoholic women display multiple changes of lipoprotein metabolism which are rapidly reversed during abstinence. In contrast to alcoholic men, studied previously by us using the same study design and methods, there was no significant elevation of HDL3 cholesterol and apo A-I. The data suggest that alcohol interferes with several regulatory steps of HDL metabolism which are partly gender dependent.

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