Lipoprotein alterations in children with bacterial meningitis.
Märksõnad
Abstraktne
Abnormalities in serum lipids, including hypertriglyceridemia, are common during infectious disorders. However, the lipoprotein pattern during infections, particularly in children, has been investigated to only a limited extent. We have monitored alterations in serum lipoproteins in eight children with a severe bacterial infection (meningitis) by a quantitating method measuring cholesterol and triglycerides in each major class. The levels of triglycerides in serum and in low-density lipoproteins were markedly elevated during the infection, whereas the amount of cholesterol in high-density lipoproteins was decreased. The cholesterol to triglyceride ratio was decreased in low-, as well as in high-density lipoproteins. These lipoprotein abnormalities may, at least in part, be explained by a depressed lipolytic activity of lipoprotein lipase, the key enzyme for removal of triglycerides in man. Serum triglycerides and the levels of cholesterol in high-density lipoproteins, as well as the ratio between these parameters, may be used as indicators of inflammatory activity.