The relationship between plasma cholesterol, amino acids and acute phase proteins in sepsis
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2004
Abstract:
The purpose of the study was to correlate degree of hypocholesterolemia
to changes in plasma levels of amino acids and other metabolic
variables in severely injured septic patients. Measurements included
plasma cholesterol, full amino-acidograms, acute phase proteins, complementary
variables and blood cell counts. The Fischer plasma molar amino
acid ratio (leucine+isoleucine+valine)/(phenylalanine+tyrosine) was
calculated. Plasma cholesterol for all measurements (n=145) was
3.1+/- 1.1mmol/L and, upon entry in the study, it was correlated inversely
with sepsis severity score (p<0.05). Along the clinical course, changes in
cholesterol were clearly paralleled by opposite changes in C-reactive
protein, which was the best correlate of cholesterol (r2=0.70, p<
0.0001). Furthermore cholesterol was inversely related to phenylalanine,
fibrinogen, lactate and white blood cell count, and directly to the
Fischer molar amino acid ratio, cystathionine, methionine, glycine and
transferrin (r2 between 0.36 and 0.15, p<0.0001 for all). Within this
pattern of correlations, cholesterol was also directly related to alkaline
phosphatase, which accounted for the effect of cholestasis, when present.
For any given value of the other variables, cholesterol increased significantly
with increase in alkaline phosphatase (p<0.0001). C-reactive protein
(CRP, mg/dl) and alkaline phosphatase (ALKPH, U/L) together
in the same regression explained 79% of the variability of cholesterol
(CHOL, mmol/L): CHOL=5.90-0.74[Log(e)CRP]+0.004[ALKPH];
multiple r2=0.79, p<0.0001. Inclusion in this regression of other variables
did not increase the r2. By using only amino acid variables, the best
fit was provided by a regression including the Fischer ratio and cystathionine,
which explained 55% of the variability of cholesterol (multiple
r2=0.55 p<0.0001), and this result was not improved by the inclusion
of other amino acids. These data show that severity of hypocholesterolemia
in sepsis is quantifiably related to changes in plasma amino acids, and
to severity of acute phase response and metabolic decompensation. More
study is needed to understand whether hypocholesterolemia in sepsis has
only diagnostic or prognostic implications, or that it may also contribute
actively to worsening of the disease.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Amino acids; plasma cholesterol; acute phase proteins; C-reactive protein; sepsis
Elenco autori:
Giovannini, Ivo; Chiarla, Carlo
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