Publication | Open Access
Lipids, lipoproteins, and apoproteins in serum during infection.
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1986
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InfectionHyperlipidemiaInflammationMetabolic SyndromeHealthcare-associated InfectionInflammatory MarkerSepsisSepsis PhenotypingInfection ControlAtherosclerosisDyslipidemiaHealth SciencesBacterial InfectionsHigh-density Lipoprotein CholesterolTotal CholesterolClinical MicrobiologyEpidemiologyCardiovascular DiseasePathogenesisClinical InfectionLipoprotein MetabolismMedicineEmergency Medicine
The study measured serum total cholesterol, HDL‑C, triglycerides, and apoproteins A and B in 54 hospitalized patients who developed sepsis, comparing 40 ICU and 14 non‑ICU cases to a control group with similar underlying conditions. Sepsis lowers total cholesterol, HDL‑C, apoproteins A and B while raising triglycerides, and these lipid shifts, unrelated to pathogen or illness severity, normalize with recovery and correlate with hypoalbuminemia, indicating a shared pathway.
We studied the alterations in the concentrations of total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, and apoproteins A and B in serum of 54 patients hospitalized for various reasons, who developed sepsis during their stay. Forty of these patients required intensive care, 14 did not. Another group of patients with the same underlying pathological conditions was used as a control. We found the following: Sepsis causes the concentrations of total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and apoproteins A and B in serum to decrease, whereas triglycerides increase. However, these changes are not related to the infectious agent, the underlying illness, or the clinical situation of the patients. The return of serum lipids to more normal concentrations parallels the recovery from sepsis. The positive correlation between the drastically decreased concentrations of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and the severe hypoalbuminemia in these patients suggests a common pathway for these two abnormalities.