J. Schmee et al., EXPONENTIAL RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PLASMA-CHOLESTEROL LEVELS AND ATHEROSCLEROTIC LESION SIZE IN HYPERLIPIDEMIC SWINE, Experimental and molecular pathology, 59(3), 1993, pp. 177-185
The effect of fish oil supplements on atherogenesis is controversial,
especially when fish oil does not lower plasma cholesterol. Some studi
es in swine have shown that a fish oil supplement to a butter-choleste
rol diet reduces atherogenesis. The fish oil supplement also frequentl
y reduces average plasma cholesterol levels. The reduction in lesion s
ize has been shown to be greater than can be expected from average pla
sma cholesterol reductions, if a linear relationship between lesion si
ze and plasma cholesterol was assumed. However, in an experiment in wh
ich we equalized time-weighted average plasma cholesterol levels, ther
e was no significant reduction in lesion size in the fish oil suppleme
nted group. This led us to question the validity of the linear relatio
nship between lesion size and plasma cholesterol level. In this study
we have combined the results of eight study blocks with a total of 76
swine fed a similar hyperlipidemic, butter-cholesterol diet. Of these,
24 received a fish oil supplement (BT + fish oil) and 52 swine receiv
ed no fish oil supplement (BT). The average lesion size as measured by
nuclear profiles per cross section of a fixed site in the abdominal a
orta (ABNpCx) was 7704 +/- 778 (mean +/- SEM) for the BT group and 236
0 +/- 1145 for the BT + fish oil group. Total plasma cholesterol level
s were measured at the outset and at monthly intervals until sacrifice
. For each animal we obtained a time-weighted average based on the tra
pezoidal rule. The average of all animals of the time-weighted average
plasma cholesterol level was 630 +/- 19 mg/dl for the BT group and 48
6 +/- 27 mg/dl for the BT + fish oil group. Using the so-called Box-Co
x method for transformation on the combined data set, we show that an
exponential relationship between ABNpCx and time-weighted average plas
ma cholesterol level is a highly appropriate model and significant (P
< 0.0001). Neither the fish oil nor the block effect on lesion size is
significant above and beyond the differences that might be due to pla
sma cholesterol levels. (C) 1993 Academic Press, Inc.