In
medicine, 'combined hyperlipidemia' (or -''aemia'') is a commonly occurring form of
hypercholesterolemia (elevated
cholesterol levels) characterised by increased
LDL and
triglyceride concentrations, often accompanied by decreased
HDL. On lipoprotein
electrophoresis (a test now rarely performed) it shows as a
hyperlipoproteinemia type IIB.
The elevated
triglyceride levels (>5
mmol/
l) are generally due to an increase in
VLDL (very low density lipoprotein), a class of
lipoprotein that is prone to cause
atherosclerosis.
Types
There are roughly two forms of this
lipid disorder:
★ ''Familial combined hyperlipidemia'' (FCH) is the familiar occurrence of this disorder, probably caused by
polymorphisms in molecules and
enzymes that participate in
lipoprotein metabolism, such as
ApoCII and
ApoCIII and CETP (
cholesterylester transferring protein).
★ ''Acquired combined hyperlipidemia'' is extremely common in patients who suffer from other diseases from the
metabolic syndrome ("syndrome X", incorporating
diabetes mellitus type II,
hypertension,
central obesity and CH). Excessive
free fatty acid production by various tissues leads to increased
VLDL synthesis by the
liver. Initially, most VLDL is converted into
LDL until this mechanism is saturated, after which VLDL levels elevate.
Treatment
Both conditions are treated with
fibrate drugs, which act on the
peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs), specifically PPARα, to decrease free fatty acid production.
Statin drugs, especially the synthetic statins (
atorvastatin and
rosuvastatin) can decrease LDL levels by increasing hepatic reuptake of LDL due to increased LDL-receptor expression.