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Title: Differences in human antioxidized LDL autoantibodies in patients with stable and unstable angina. Author: Fernandes JL, Orford JL, Garcia C, Coelho OR, Gidlund M, Blotta MH. Journal: J Autoimmun; 2004 Dec; 23(4):345-52. PubMed ID: 15571928. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Autoantibodies to oxidized LDL (anti-oxLDL) have been found in the serum of patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). This study was designed to compare the differences in anti-oxLDL titers and isotypes in unstable and stable angina patients and to correlate these results with known markers of active inflammation in CAD. METHODS: Thirty patients from a tertiary referral general hospital with documented CAD were studied. Anti-oxLDL IgG titers and its isotypes, high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) and serum amyloid A (SAA) were measured. RESULTS: The anti-oxLDL IgG titer was lower (p=0.03) in the unstable angina group compared to the stable angina patients (0.084+/-0.102 OD versus 0.195+/-0.149 OD, respectively). The predominant IgG isotype in both groups was IgG2. IgG4 was significantly higher (0.270+/-0.146 OD, p=0.04) in the unstable angina group versus patients with stable angina (0.198+/-0.019 OD). There was a significant inverse correlation between anti-oxLDL and hsCRP and SAA in this sample population (R=0.37, p<0.05 and R=0.36, p<0.05, respectively). CONCLUSION: Patients with unstable angina have lower levels of anti-oxLDL IgG in the acute setting of CAD. Plaque instabilization does not seem to acutely modify the isotype subsets of anti-oxLDL IgG in these patients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]