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Submitted on March 9, 2006
Accepted on October 12, 2006
árka Lhoták ;
From the Department of Internal Medicine (K.M.W., R.B.M., L.L., S.R.L.), The University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, Iowa City; Baylor Institute of Metabolic Disease (E.A., T.B.), Dallas, Tex; McMaster University (S.L., R.C.A.), Hamilton, Ontario; and the Veterans Affairs Medical Center (S.R.L.), Iowa City Iowa.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: steven-lentz{at}uiowa.edu.
Objective--We tested the hypothesis that hyperhomocysteinemia and hypercholesterolemia promote arterial thrombosis in mice.
Methods and Results--Male apolipoprotein E (Apoe)-deficient mice were fed one of four diets: control, hyperhomocysteinemic (HH), high fat (HF), or high fat/hyperhomocysteinemic (HF/HH). Total cholesterol was elevated 2-fold with the HF or HF/HH diets compared with the control or HH diets (P<0.001). Plasma total homocysteine (tHcy) was elevated (12 to 15 µmol/L) with the HH or HF/HH diets compared with the control or HF diets (4 to 6 µmol/L; P<0.001). Aortic sinus lesion area correlated strongly with total cholesterol (P<0.001) but was independent of tHcy. At 12 weeks of age, the time to thrombotic occlusion of the carotid artery after photochemical injury was >50% shorter in mice fed the HF diets, with or without hyperhomocysteinemia, compared with the control diet (P<0.05). At 24 weeks of age, carotid artery thrombosis was also accelerated in mice fed the HH diet (P<0.05). Endothelium-dependent nitric oxide-mediated relaxation of carotid artery rings was impaired in mice fed the HF, HH, or HF/HH diets compared with the control diet (P<0.05).
Conclusions--Hyperhomocysteinemia and hypercholesterolemia, alone or in combination, produce endothelial dysfunction and increased susceptibility to thrombosis in Apoe-deficient mice.
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