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  • Title: Apolipoprotein E phenotype frequency in type II diabetic patients with different forms of hyperlipoproteinemia.
    Author: Parhofer KG, Richter WO, Schwandt P.
    Journal: Horm Metab Res; 1990 Nov; 22(11):589-94. PubMed ID: 2272605.
    Abstract:
    Atherosclerosis is the main cause of death in diabetes mellitus. This may at least in part be due to lipoprotein abnormalities which have been described in these patients. Apolipoprotein-E is a component of most lipoprotein fractions and plays an important role in the catabolism of VLDL. The different apolipoprotein-E phenotypes determined genetically are associated with certain hyperlipoproteinemias in a various degree in nondiabetic patients. In most cases apolipoprotein-E phenotype E2/2 is characteristic for familial dysbetalipoproteinemia. Phenotype E3/2 was found to be more frequent in hypertriglyceridemia while phenotype E4/3 was associated with hypercholesterolemia as well as with type V hyperlipoproteinemia. We studied apolipoprotein-E phenotypes and serum lipids in 141 type II diabetic patients (36 normolipidemic 41 type IIa hyperlipidemic, 32 type IIb hyperlipidemic, 24 type II hyperlipidemic, 8 type V hyperlipidemic). the phenotype E3/3 was more common in normolipidemic diabetic (77.8%) than in hyperlipoproteinemic diabetic patients (42.9%) or in the control group (57.5%). On the other hand phenotype E3/2 was more frequent in hypertriglyceridemic (50%) than in normolipidemic (5.6%) or hypercholesterolemic (hyperlipoproteinemia IIa: 4.9%, IIb: 9.4%) diabetic patients. The phenotype E4/3 was more frequent in all hyperlipoproteinemic diabetic patients, especially in those having hypercholesterolemia (34.2%) or mixed hyperlipidemia (50%). In conclusion we found a strong association between apo-E2 and hypertriglyceridemia in diabetic patients. This association was stronger than the one found in the general population. The association between apo-E4 and hypercholesterolemia in diabetic patients was similar to the one described in non-diabetic patients. We therefore conclude that type II diabetes mellitus is a possible cofactor in the apolipoprotein-E2 associated hyperlipoproteinemia.
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