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Clinical Trial
. 1985 Aug 30;54(2):425-30.

Dietary supplementation with vitamin E in hyperlipoproteinemias: effects on plasma lipid peroxides, antioxidant activity, prostacyclin generation and platelet aggregability

  • PMID: 3909500
Clinical Trial

Dietary supplementation with vitamin E in hyperlipoproteinemias: effects on plasma lipid peroxides, antioxidant activity, prostacyclin generation and platelet aggregability

A Szczeklik et al. Thromb Haemost. .

Abstract

In a placebo-controlled trial healthy volunteers and patients with hyperlipoproteinemias types II and IV received orally vitamin E at doses of 300 mg and 600 mg daily for 2 weeks. Serum tocopherol levels increased two-fold, but serum concentrations of total lipids, cholesterol, triglycerides, ceruloplasmin and transferrin remained unchanged. Dietary supplementation with vitamin E suppressed elevated concentrations of plasma lipid peroxides and this effect was correlated with an increase in serum antioxidant activity. In patients a mild platelet suppressant effect of vitamin E (600 mg daily) was observed. Feeding an atherogenic diet to rabbits for a week resulted in elevation of plasma lipid peroxides and a 90% decrease in arterial generation of prostacyclin. Enrichment of the atherogenic diet with 100 mg vitamin E daily prevented the increase in plasma lipid peroxides and protected the prostacyclin generating system in arteries. Thus, in hyperlipoproteinemias vitamin E corrects certain abnormalities of lipid metabolism which might predispose to atherosclerosis.

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