(Download) "Fasting Versus Nonfasting Triglycerides and the Prediction of Cardiovascular Risk: Do We Need to Revisit the Oral Triglyceride Tolerance Test?(Perspectives)" by Clinical Chemistry # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Fasting Versus Nonfasting Triglycerides and the Prediction of Cardiovascular Risk: Do We Need to Revisit the Oral Triglyceride Tolerance Test?(Perspectives)
- Author : Clinical Chemistry
- Release Date : January 01, 2008
- Genre: Chemistry,Books,Science & Nature,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 197 KB
Description
Historically, triglycerides have been measured in the fasting state for 2 reasons. First, because of the marked increase in triglycerides after fat ingestion, the variability in triglyceride measurements is much smaller in the fasting state. Second, before the availability of direct assays for LDL cholesterol (LDL-C),1 estimation of LDL-C was performed in clinical practice almost exclusively by use of the Friedewald equation, which requires that both the HDL-C concentration and the fasting triglyceride concentration divided by 5 be subtracted from the total cholesterol concentration. The recommendations to measure triglycerides in the fasting state did not, however, derive from a consistent set of prospective cohort studies showing that fasting concentrations were superior to nonfasting concentrations for the detection of cardiovascular risk. Instead, following screening guidelines, most epidemiologic investigations simply relied on fasting triglycerides. Taken as a whole, such studies indicate that fasting triglycerides are a univariate predictor of vascular disease. Controversy exists, however, regarding the clinical usefulness of fasting triglycerides as an independent predictor of risk, because adjustment for other covariates--in particular HDL-C--markedly decreases both the magnitude and significance of observed epidemiologic effects (1). The extent to which investigators have sought to avoid nonfasting triglycerides as a method for risk detection is evident in a recent metaanalysis that limited evaluation only to those epidemiologic studies that measured fasting triglycerides, specifically "to exclude the possibility of postprandial effects" (2).