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High-Density Lipoid Deficiency clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04243876 Completed - Clinical trials for Myocardial Infarction

Decrease in Paraoxonase Enzyme Level and Myocardial İnfarction

Start date: December 30, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Myocardial infarction is a polygenic disease that may occur due to various environmental risk factors. Mortality risk of the disease; sex, age, smoking, systolic blood pressure, total cholesterol, and high-density lipoprotein levels. The paraoxonase-1 phenotype is expressed as the paraoxonase/arylesterase ratio and is closely related to high-density lipoprotein, acting as an endogenous defense mechanism against vascular oxidative stress, thus contributing to the prevention of atherosclerosis. Serum concentration and activity depend on environmental factors as well as genetic polymorphism. This decrease in enzyme concentration causes changes in gene expression (1). Numerous data on Paraoxonase-1 levels have been found in studies, especially with decreasing serum paraoxonase and arylesterase activities with age, associated with increased risk of systemic oxidative stress and atherosclerosis in humans. Many studies have shown that serum Paraoxonase-1 activity is significantly reduced in people with myocardial infarction, dyslipidemia, atherosclerosis, and chronic kidney disease. The most important risk factor for these and similar diseases is aging. Diversity of conditions such as genetic predisposition, malnutrition, stress, and smoking, which increases vascular dysfunction due to oxidative stress, classify individuals with acute myocardial infarction according to age groups and investigate whether there is a relationship between serum Paraoxonase-1 activity and severity of coronary artery disease in young patients. The paraoxonase-1 enzyme, which is known to decrease blood levels with age, is found to be significantly lower in patients with myocardial infarction at a young age compared to the healthy control group.