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Effect of a multivitamin preparation supplemented with phytosterol on serum lipids and infarct size in rats fed with normal and high cholesterol diet.

Lipids in health and disease
September 25, 2013
Tamás Csont et al. (11 authors)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tAnimal Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine if a multivitamin, mineral, and trace element preparation enriched with phytosterol (VMTP) could reduce serum cholesterol levels and provide cardioprotection in hyperlipidemic rats.

Results Summary

VMTP significantly reduced serum cholesterol levels in hyperlipidemic rats but did not affect triglyceride levels, infarct size, or inflammatory and antioxidant markers.

Population

Male Wistar rats fed a cholesterol-enriched diet to induce hyperlipidemia.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

4 weeks

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (9)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
cholesterol-enriched diet
increase
serum cholesterol level
Male Wistar rats
-
showed significantly higher
#1
cholesterol-enriched diet
no change
serum triglyceride level
Male Wistar rats
-
did not change
#2
VMTP preparation
decrease
serum cholesterol level
hyperlipidemic group
-
significantly decreased
#3
VMTP preparation
no change
triglyceride levels
hyperlipidemic group
-
without affecting
#4
VMTP preparation
no change
infarct size
-
-
did not show beneficial effect
#5
VMTP preparation
no change
inflammatory marker hs-CRP
-
-
were also not significantly different
#6
VMTP preparation
no change
antioxidant uric acid
-
-
were also not significantly different
#7
VMTP preparation
decrease
serum cholesterol
hyperlipidemic subjects
-
reduces
#8
VMTP preparation
no change
cardioprotection
-
-
does not provide
#9
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although complex multivitamin products are widely used as dietary supplements to maintain health or as special medical food in certain diseases, the effects of these products were not investigated in hyperlipidemia which is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. Therefore, here we investigated if a preparation developed for human use containing different vitamins, minerals and trace elements enriched with phytosterol (VMTP) affects the severity of experimental hyperlipidemia as well as myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury. METHODS: Male Wistar rats were fed a normal or cholesterol-enriched (2% cholesterol + 0.25% cholate) diet for 12 weeks to induce hyperlipidemia. From week 8, rats in both groups were fed with a VMTP preparation or placebo for 4 weeks. Serum triglyceride and cholesterol levels were measured at week 0, 8 and 12. At week 12, hearts were isolated, perfused according to Langendorff and subjected to a 30-min coronary occlusion followed by 120 min reperfusion to measure infarct size. RESULTS: At week 8, cholesterol-fed rats showed significantly higher serum cholesterol level as compared to normal animals, however, serum triglyceride level did not change. VMTP treatment significantly decreased serum cholesterol level in the hyperlipidemic group by week 12 without affecting triglyceride levels. However, VMTP did not show beneficial effect on infarct size. The inflammatory marker hs-CRP and the antioxidant uric acid were also not significantly different. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first demonstration that treatment of hyperlipidemic subjects with a VMTP preparation reduces serum cholesterol, the major risk factor for cardiovascular disease; however, it does not provide cardioprotection.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnimalsC-Reactive ProteinCholesterolCholesterol, DietaryDietary SupplementsHyperlipidemiasInfusion PumpsMaleMyocardial InfarctionMyocardial Reperfusion InjuryMyocardiumOrgan Culture TechniquesPhytosterolsRatsRats, WistarTriglyceridesUric AcidVitamins
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy60/10
Quality75/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations16
Citations/Year1.3
Relative Citation Ratio0.66
NIH Percentile35.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.08
Normalized Score0.59
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