K

K. Williams

Duke University

Publishes on Inflammatory mediators and NSAID effects, Pharmacogenetics and Drug Metabolism, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins. 30 papers and 3.7k citations.

30Publications
3.7kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Apo B versus cholesterol in estimating cardiovascular risk and in guiding therapy: report of the thirty‐person/ten‐country panel
Philip J. Barter, Christie M. Ballantyne, Rafael Carmena et al.|Journal of Internal Medicine|2006
Cited by 471Open Access

There is abundant evidence that the risk of atherosclerotic vascular disease is directly related to plasma cholesterol levels. Accordingly, all of the national and transnational screening and therapeutic guidelines are based on total or LDL cholesterol. This presumes that cholesterol is the most important lipoprotein-related proatherogenic risk variable. On the contrary, risk appears to be more directly related to the number of circulating atherogenic particles that contact and enter the arterial wall than to the measured concentration of cholesterol in these lipoprotein fractions. Each of the atherogenic lipoprotein particles contains a single molecule of apolipoprotein (apo) B and therefore the concentration of apo B provides a direct measure of the number of circulating atherogenic lipoproteins. Evidence from fundamental, epidemiological and clinical trial studies indicates that apo B is superior to any of the cholesterol indices to recognize those at increased risk of vascular disease and to judge the adequacy of lipid-lowering therapy. On the basis of this evidence, we believe that apo B should be included in all guidelines as an indicator of cardiovascular risk. In addition, the present target adopted by the Canadian guideline groups of an apo B <90 mg dL(-1) in high-risk patients should be reassessed in the light of the new clinical trial results and a new ultra-low target of <80 mg dL(-1) be considered. The evidence also indicates that the apo B/apo A-I ratio is superior to any of the conventional cholesterol ratios in patients without symptomatic vascular disease or diabetes to evaluate the lipoprotein-related risk of vascular disease.

Stereoselective disposition of ibuprofen enantiomers in man.
EJ Lee, K. Williams, Richard O. Day et al.|British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology|1985
Cited by 257Open Access

This study has examined the stereoselective disposition of the enantiomers of ibuprofen in four healthy male subjects following separate administration of racemic ibuprofen (800 mg) and of each enantiomer (400 mg). A mean of 63 +/- 6% of an administered dose of R(-) ibuprofen was stereospecifically inverted to the S(+) enantiomer. There were no measurable inversion of the S(+) to R(-) ibuprofen. The kinetics of the individual enantiomers were altered by concurrent administration of the respective optical antipode. It is likely that this change reflects an interaction between the enantiomers at plasma protein binding sites. It was found that formation of ester glucuronide conjugates stereoselectively favoured the S(+) enantiomer. The data have demonstrated that the pharmacokinetics of ibuprofen and other alpha-methylarylacetic acids cannot be interpreted adequately without studying the pharmacokinetics of the individual enantiomers.