Abstract

In order to determine the in vivo influx of plasma cholesterol into human aortic intimamedia tissue, specimens of the ascending aortic wall without visible atherosclerosis were obtained from patients undergoing aortic valve replacement. Before the operation the patients were intravenously injected with autologous plasma in which the lipoproteins were labeled with radioactive cholesterol. The influence of the duration of the exposure time (0.3-114 h) and of the distribution of radioactivity between free and esterified cholesterol in plasma on the amount of radioactivity found in the arterial wall was studied by the simultaneous use of 3H- and 14C-cholesterol. It was shown that the influx of free and esterified cholesterol into the intima-media layer of the tissue could be calculated from a set of linear equations that relate the labeled sterols in the tissue to the average specific activities in plasma. In nine patients between 50 and 70 yr of age with 4.2-5.9 mM total cholesterol in plasma, the influx of free cholesterol and of esterified cholesterol was 1.2-8.8 and 1.0-12.5 nmol X cm-2 X d-1, respectively. Both hydrolysis and esterification of the sterol fractions in the aortic tissue and exchange of free cholesterol between the plasma lipoproteins and the tissue were demonstrated. The cholesterol content of the intima-media layer was 0.6-2.3 mumol X cm-2. This corresponds to the influx of esterified cholesterol during a period of only 0.1-3.5 yr, which is short compared with the lifespan of the patient. Our data thus suggest that removal of esterified cholesterol from aortic tissue without visible atherosclerosis represents a major importance for the cholesterol concentration in the tissue.

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