D

Désiré Collen

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

Publishes on Protease and Inhibitor Mechanisms, Virus-based gene therapy research, Blood Coagulation and Thrombosis Mechanisms. 199 papers and 15.4k citations.

199Publications
15.4kTotal Citations

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Oxidized LDL and Malondialdehyde-Modified LDL in Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes and Stable Coronary Artery Disease
Paul Holvoet, Johan Vanhaecke, S. Janssens et al.|Circulation|1998
Cited by 674Open Access

BACKGROUND: The association between oxidative modifications of LDL and coronary artery disease (CAD) is suspected but not established. Therefore, the association between plasma levels of oxidized LDL and malondialdehyde (MDA)-modified LDL and acute coronary syndromes and stable CAD was investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: The study population contained 63 patients with acute coronary syndromes (45 with acute myocardial infarction and 18 with unstable angina pectoris), 35 nontransplanted patients with angiographically confirmed stable angina, 28 heart transplant patients with posttransplant CAD, 79 heart transplant patients without CAD, and 65 control subjects. After correction for age, sex, and LDL and HDL cholesterol, plasma levels of oxidized LDL and MDA-modified LDL were significantly higher in patients with CAD than in individuals without CAD (r2=0.57 and r2=0.26, respectively; both P=0.0001). Plasma levels of MDA-modified LDL were significantly higher in patients with acute coronary syndromes than in individuals with stable CAD (r2=0.65; P=0.0001) and were associated with increased levels of troponin I and C-reactive protein (r2=0.39 and r2=0.34, respectively; both P=0.0001). Plasma levels of oxidized LDL were not associated with increased levels of troponin I and C-reactive protein (r2=0.089 and r2=0.063, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Elevated plasma levels of oxidized LDL are associated with CAD. Elevated plasma levels of MDA-modified LDL suggest plaque instability and may be useful for the identification of patients with acute coronary syndromes.