View clinical trials related to Cholesterol.
Filter by:Hypothesis: increasing dietary cholesterol in humans will increase visceral, but not subcutaneous adipocyte size, free cholesterol content, and inflammatory gene expression. Visceral and abdominal subcutaneous adipose tissue biopsies will be obtained from non-obese subjects undergoing elective abdominal surgery at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center after 3 weeks of zero (control) or 1g dietary cholesterol supplementation. Blood samples will also be taken before and after 3 weeks of dietary supplementation (0 vs. 1g dietary cholesterol) to measure plasma lipids levels, and ex vivo monocyte chemotaxis. Blood will also be used to isolate CD14+ monocytes for RNA extraction and storage for future transcriptome studies. Measurements of adipocyte size, free cholesterol content, and inflammatory gene and protein expression in the adipose tissue biopsies to test the hypothesis. Adipocytes and the stromal vascular fraction will be isolated and evaluated for CD14+ macrophages for RNA extraction and storage for future transcriptome analysis.