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Robert I. Levy

Researcher at National Institutes of Health

Publications -  162
Citations -  49327

Robert I. Levy is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Lipoprotein & Very low-density lipoprotein. The author has an hindex of 65, co-authored 162 publications receiving 47398 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert I. Levy include University of Pittsburgh.

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Estimation of the Concentration of Low-Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol in Plasma, Without Use of the Preparative Ultracentrifuge

TL;DR: A method for estimating the cholesterol content of the serum low-density lipoprotein fraction (Sf0-20) is presented and comparison of this suggested procedure with the more direct procedure, in which the ultracentrifuge is used, yielded correlation coefficients of .94 to .99.
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The metabolism of very low density lipoprotein proteins. I. Preliminary in vitro and in vivo observations.

TL;DR: During the first 24 h after injection of 125I-labeled very low density lipoprotein to humans, the decay rate of low densitylipoprotein apoprotein from very lowdensity lipoproteins was faster than that of apolipoprotein glutamic acid, apoipoprotein alanine1 and apolipropoteinAlanine2.
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Fat Transport in Lipoproteins — An Integrated Approach to Mechanisms and Disorders

TL;DR: The Type II hyperlipoproteinemia as mentioned in this paper is defined as an increase in the concentration of lipoproteins that have discrete β-mobility, and is defined by the Type II lipoprotein pattern.
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Effects of therapy with cholestyramine on progression of coronary arteriosclerosis: results of the NHLBI Type II Coronary Intervention Study.

TL;DR: Although the sample size does not allow a definitive conclusion to be drawn, this study suggests that cholestyramine treatment retards the rate of progression of CAD in patients with Type II hyperlipoproteinemia.
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A specific apoprotein activator for lipoprotein lipase.

TL;DR: Only apoLP-glu is able to stimulate LPL activity in the absence of phospholipid and, in the presence of phosphoipid, increases activity twelvefold over baseline levels.