Clinical investigation on the hypolipidemic effect of simvastatin versus probucol in hemodialysis patients
- PMID: 7813167
Clinical investigation on the hypolipidemic effect of simvastatin versus probucol in hemodialysis patients
Abstract
In chronic renal failure hypertriglyceridemia is a well-known complication that persists during hemodialysis treatment: it may be one of the major risk factor for cardiovascular death in these patients. We studied the effects of two lipid lowering drugs; simvastatin (20 mg/day for six months) and probucol (500 mg/day for six months), on lipid profile in 12 hemodialysis patients. Simvastatin therapy reduced plasma total cholesterol by 26% (p > 0.002), LDL-cholesterol by 36% (p > 0.002) and triglycerides by 28% (p > 0.05): plasma HDL-cholesterol and apo-A were raised, but not significantly. Probucol therapy decreased plasma triglycerides by 38% (p > 0.05), total cholesterol by 15% and LDL-cholesterol by 19%: plasma HDL-cholesterol and apo-A were decreased but not significantly. No side effects occurred with either drug. These data suggest that in hemodialysis patients both simvastatin and probucol profoundly affect the lipid profile, as well as the triglyceride levels.
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