Browsing by Author "ANTEZANA, C"
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- ItemEFFECT OF AGING ON BILIARY LIPID-COMPOSITION AND BILE-ACID METABOLISM IN NORMAL CHILEAN WOMEN(1978) VALDIVIESO, V; PALMA, R; WUNKHAUS, R; ANTEZANA, C; SEVERIN, C; CONTRERAS, ABiliary lipid composition was determined in fasting gallbladder bile of 12 young and 12 elderly asymptomatic Chilean women with normal weights and recent, normal cholecystograms. The proportion of biliary cholesterol and the lithogenic index were significantly higher in elderly females. Moreover, supersaturated bile was present in 8.3% of the young and in 41.7% of the older women studied. Obesity enhances the saturation of bile in older females: lithogenic bile was found in 100% of 4 elderly, obese women with radiologically normal gallbladders. The bile acid pool and cholic acid metabolism were studied in 5 young and 4 older normal females. Both groups showed similar values of bile acid pool, cholic acid synthesis and turnover. Aging per se modifies the proportions of biliary lipids in Chilean women, and provide a partial explanation for the frequency of gallstones observed among them. The increment in the lithogenic index of gallbladder bile with age takes place without significant changes in bile acid metabolism, suggesting that the canalicular secretion of cholesterol increases with aging.
- ItemINFLUENCE OF LEGUME INTAKE ON BILIARY LIPIDS AND CHOLESTEROL SATURATION IN YOUNG CHILEAN MEN - IDENTIFICATION OF A DIETARY RISK FACTOR FOR CHOLESTEROL GALLSTONE FORMATION IN A HIGHLY PREVALENT AREA(1989) NERVI, F; COVARRUBIAS, C; BRAVO, P; VELASCO, N; ULLOA, N; CRUZ, F; FAVA, M; SEVERIN, C; DELPOZO, R; ANTEZANA, C; VALDIVIESO, V; ARTEAGA, AChileans and North American Indians have one of the highest prevalence rates of cholesterol gallstones in the world. The most common theory to explain this has been the operation of some as yet undefined genetic risk factor in these populations. Searching for some common environmental factor for gallstones in Chileans and North American Indians, we found that beans and other legumes are common foods consumed by both populations. In this study we tested the hypothesis that legume intake may favor the production of biliary cholesterol supersaturation. We studied 20 young men subjected to a diet containing 120 g/day of legumes and a control diet without legumes for a period of 1 mo each. Both diets supplied identical quantities of energy, carbohydrates, protein, total fat, fiber, and cholesterol. Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentration decreased by 16% (p < 0.001) after the legume diet. Biliary cholesterol saturation increased in 19 of the 20 subjects; the mean of the group markedly increased from 110% to 169% (p < 0.001) after the legume diet. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that legume intake is a potential risk factor for cholesterol gallstone disease.