Abstract
Basal values of lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) were estimated in healthy subjects, in patients with the so-called risk ischemic heart diseases (IHD)—obesity, diabetes, hypertension, and hyperlipoproteinemia II—and in patients with an IHD-infarction of the myocardium. A precise method employing a 14-C-4-cholesterol-labeled common normolipidemic substrate was used. A highly significant difference in the average values of LC AT activity between healthy men and women was found. LCAT in men clearly correlated with the relative body weight in reference and ‘risk’-IHD groups, while in women this relationship was not so pronounced. Fractional turnover of cholesterol in men with ‘risk’ diseases decreased, while in women it remained at the level of the reference group. To assess the dependence between LCAT-dependent indicators and IHD, criteria for evaluating the deviations from reference values were proposed. The number of deviations from the reference group increased in the sequence: obesity, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipoproteinemia, and the infarction of the myocardium.