Abstract

Serum cholesterol precursor levels and plant sterol were related to parameters of cholesterol metabolism in 22 patients with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia. The serum levels of cholesterol precursor sterols were inversely related to fractional absorption of dietary cholesterol and subsequently positively to overall cholesterol synthesis. The serum plant sterol levels, on the contrary, were significantly associated with fractional cholesterol absorption and negatively with overall cholesterol synthesis. These results were confirmed also with multivariate analyses. Fecal lanosterol, a cholesterol precursor, was related positively to cholesterol synthesis measured by sterol balance and serum precursors and negatively to serum plant sterols. The serum precursor and plant sterol levels were inversely significantly related to each other, indicating that the higher cholesterol absorption efficiency the higher are the serum plant sterol levels and the lower the precursor sterol contents and the overall cholesterol synthesis.

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