Abstract

OBJECTIVESWe sought to examine the effects of plasma lipids, especially in remnants after a fat meal, on systemic arterial compliance (SAC), a newly recognized cardiovascular risk factor.BACKGROUNDPost-prandial remnants correlate with coronary heart disease events through mechanisms that may include vascular dysfunction, although the effect on SAC has not been studied.METHODSSystemic arterial compliance was measured non-invasively over 6 h after a fat meal in 16 subjects with varying plasma triglyceride levels. Changes were related to rises in plasma lipids and remnant lipids. Systemic arterial compliance was measured in 20 subjects after a control low-fat meal.RESULTSThe fat meal induced increments in plasma triglyceride and remnant cholesterol and triglyceride (respectively +54%, 50% and 290% at 3 h, analysis of variance <0.001). Systemic arterial compliance fell at 3 h and 6 h by 25% and 27% (analysis of variance <0.001). Baseline SAC correlated significantly with all lipid concentrations at 0, 3 h and 6 h, but only with triglyceride on stepwise regression analysis. The SAC response to the low-fat meal was very small and not significant.CONCLUSIONSThis is the first demonstration of SAC becoming impaired after a fat meal. Remnant lipids and plasma total triglyceride appeared to contribute to the fall in SAC.

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