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Journal ArticleDOI

Hypercholesterolemia due to Elevated Low Density Lipoprotein-Cholesterol in Newborns with Anencephaly and Adrenal Atrophy

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TLDR
The hypercholesterolemia in anencephalic newborns is a result of decreased uptake and utilization of plasma LDL-cholesterol for steroid biosynthesis by the adrenals, which in normally developing fetuses is used as substrate for adrenal steroidogenesis early in gestation as well as near term when the rates of growth and steroid production by the Adrenals accelerate markedly.
Abstract: 
In the present investigation, we evaluated the relationship between plasma lipoprotein-cholesterol and adrenal steroid production in abortuses and newborns in whom the adrenal was expected to be atrophic, i.e. in anencephalics. We found that umbilical cord plasma levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DS) in 23 anencephalics delivered between 13.5 and 45.5 weeks of gestation (mean +/- SE, 176 +/- 37 ng/ml) were significantly lower than those in normal newborns of similar gestational ages; the umbilical cord plasma concentrations of cortisol in many anencephalics, however, were within normal limits. The levels of total cholesterol (134 +/- 10 mg/dl) and low density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol (94 +/- 8 mg/dl) were substantially higher (up to 4-fold) in umbilical cord plasma of anencephalics than in umbilical cord plasma of normal newborns. The mean level of high density lipoprotein-cholesterol in umbilical cord plasma of anencephalic abortuses and newborns (38 +/- 4 mg/dl) was approximately 50% higher than that in normal newborns. The lowest plasma cholesterol level (56 mg/dl) and a concentration of DS (480 ng/ml) that was among the highest seen in the group of anencephalics were found in an anencephalic newborn in whom adrenals were of near-normal weight. Plasma cholesterol levels were inversely correlated to adrenal weights and plasma DS levels, and plasma DS levels were correlated to adrenal weight. Whereas the estimated plasma pool of DS in normal newborns increased to over 300 micrograms during the latter part of gestation, that of anencephalic newborns was much lower (less than 1 to 26 micrograms) and did not appear to increase as a function of gestational age. Conversely, the estimated plasma pool of cholesterol in normal newborns appeared to decline slightly during the last 10 weeks of gestation (80 mg at term), whereas that of anencephalic newborns expanded greatly near term; levels (approximately 200 mg) were attained that were about 3 times those in normal newborns. We conclude that the hypercholesterolemia in anencephalic newborns, due primarily to extremely elevated plasma levels of LDL-cholesterol, is a result of decreased uptake and utilization of plasma LDL-cholesterol for steroid biosynthesis by the adrenals. Since hypercholesterolemia is apparently early in gestation in anencephalic abortuses, we speculate that in normally developing fetuses, plasma LDL-cholesterol is used as substrate for adrenal steroidogenesis early in gestation as well as near term when the rates of growth and steroid production by the adrenals accelerate markedly.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate production in the human adrenal during development and aging.

TL;DR: The adrenal of the adult responds to stress in many instances like that of the fetus: increased cortisol secretion and diminished DHEA/DS secretion, and the mechanisms for this divergence in the adrenocortical pathway is unknown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dehydroepiandrosterone feeding prevents aortic fatty streak formation and cholesterol accumulation in cholesterol-fed rabbit.

TL;DR: DHEA feedinghibits the development of aortic fatty streaks in cholesterol-fed rabbits, Independent of changes in plasma total and LDL cholesterol levels or DHEA conversion to estrogens or cortlcolds.
Journal ArticleDOI

The human fetal adrenal: making adrenal androgens for placental estrogens.

TL;DR: The features of the HFA gland are reviewed, including its impressive ability to synthesize large amounts of adrenal androgens for use by the placenta to produce estrogens.
Book ChapterDOI

Adrenal androgens in humans and nonhuman primates: production, zonation and regulation.

TL;DR: It is hoped that recent studies demonstrating adrenarche in the rhesus will put in proper context the significance of adrenal zonation in nonhuman primates as valid models for human adrenal development and function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decline in the concentration of low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol in human fetal plasma near term

TL;DR: It is suggested that the increasing rate of growth and steroid production by the fetal adrenals near term is causally related to the significant decline in the concentration of both LDL-cholesterol and total cholesterol in fetal plasma during normal human development.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Enzymatic determination of total serum cholesterol.

TL;DR: An enzymatic method is described for determination of total serum cholesterol by use of a single aqueous reagent and has excellent precision.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Low-Density Lipoprotein Pathway and its Relation to Atherosclerosis

TL;DR: The LDL Pathway is a Vehicle for Normal Human PhySIOLOGY and the PATHOGENESIS of ATHEROSCLEROSIS and its implications for normal human physiology and the pathogenesis of AtherOSCLerosis are discussed.
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Pathology of the Fetus and the Newborn

TL;DR: The introductory classdication of the diseases considered is a revelation of clear thinking and logical arrangement and Sir Tbomas has always shown special care in the proper use of words in the nomenclature of diseases in bones and his present list should be accepted as authoritatively correct.
Book ChapterDOI

Receptor-mediated uptake of lipoprotein-cholesterol and its utilization for steroid synthesis in the adrenal cortex

TL;DR: In the model systems, the endogenous synthesis of cholesterol in the adrenal is important in several situations: transiently, when there is a sudden stimulus to steroid secretion, and when the rate of steroid synthesis is so great that maximal lipoprotein receptor activity cannot supply sufficient cholesterol and supplementary cholesterol synthesis within the gland is required.
Journal ArticleDOI

Defects of receptor-mediated low density lipoprotein catabolism in homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia and hypothyroidism in vivo

TL;DR: The results demonstrate the existence of an intrinsic and almost total defect of receptor-mediated LDL catabolism in homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia and demontrate an analogous but reversible abnormality in hypothyroidism.
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