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Comparison of the lipid compositions of the aortic lesions in rabbits given different atherogenic diets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 March 2007
Abstract
1. The compositions of the lipids in the atheromatous lesions of rabbits have been studied in an experiment in which two groups of rabbits (twelve/group) were given different atherogenic diets for a period of 38 weeks. One group of rabbits was given a diet in which 35% of the total calories was derived from butterfat and the other group was given a diet in which 48% of the total calories was derived from starch.
2. At the end of the feeding period the rabbits were killed and the atheromatous plaques were dissected out from the aortic intima of each rabbit. The lipid compositions of the aortic lesions were determined and the results compared with the compositions of the plasma lipids.
3. In the lipids of the aortic lesions in the rabbits given the high-butterfat diet, the proportions of cholesterol and cholesterol esters were higher and the proportion of triglycerides was lower than in the lipids of the aortic lesions in the rabbits given the high-starch diet. Irrespective of dietary treatment, free cholesterol constituted a higher proportion of the lesion lipids than it did of the plasma lipids.
4. In the rabbits on either dietary treatment, the lesion cholesterol esters contained higher concentrations of oleic acid and lower concentrations of linoleic acid than did the plasma cholesterol esters. In the lesion phospholipids there were higher concentrations of palmitic, palmitoleic, stearic and oleic acids and lower concentrations of linoleic and arachidonic acids than in the plasma phospholipids.
5. In both groups of rabbits the phospholipids of the aortic lesions contained higher proportions of cephalin and sphingomyelin and lower proportions of lecithin than did the plasma phospholipids.
6. The results of this investigation are discussed in relation to the possible origins of the lipids in the aortic lesions of the experimental rabbits.
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- Copyright © The Nutrition Society 1967
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