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Journal of Lipid Research
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    • Jensen, Majken K2
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    • atherosclerosis1
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    JLR Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological Research

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    • Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological Research
      Open Access

      Cholesterol efflux capacity, HDL cholesterol, and risk of coronary heart disease: a nested case-control study in men

      Journal of Lipid Research
      Vol. 60Issue 8p1457–1464Published online: May 29, 2019
      • Leah E. Cahill
      • Frank M. Sacks
      • Eric B. Rimm
      • Majken K. Jensen
      Cited in Scopus: 21
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        The capacity of HDLs to accept cholesterol effluxing from macrophages has been proposed as a new biomarker of HDLs' anti-atherogenic function. Whether cholesterol efflux capacity (CEC) is independent of HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) as a biomarker for coronary heart disease (CHD) risk in a generally healthy primary-prevention population remains unanswered. Therefore, in this nested case-control study, we simultaneously assessed CEC (using J774 cells) and plasma HDL-C levels as predictors of CHD in healthy middle-aged and older men not receiving treatment affecting blood lipid concentrations.
        Cholesterol efflux capacity, HDL cholesterol, and risk of coronary heart disease: a nested case-control study in men
      • Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological Research
        Open Access

        Does pregnancy alter life-course lipid trajectories? Evidence from the HUNT Study in Norway

        Journal of Lipid Research
        Vol. 59Issue 12p2403–2412Published online: October 12, 2018
        • Amanda R. Markovitz
        • Eirin B. Haug
        • Julie Horn
        • Abigail Fraser
        • Corrie Macdonald-Wallis
        • Kate Tilling
        • and others
        Cited in Scopus: 11
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          We examined the association between pregnancy and life-course lipid trajectories. Linked data from the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study and the Medical Birth Registry of Norway yielded 19,987 parous and 1,625 nulliparous women. Using mixed-effects spline models, we estimated differences in nonfasting lipid levels from before to after first birth in parous women and between parous and nulliparous women. HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) dropped by −4.2 mg/dl (95% CI: −5.0, −3.3) from before to after first birth in adjusted models, a 7% change, and the total cholesterol (TC) to HDL-C ratio increased by 0.18 (95% CI: 0.11, 0.25), with no change in non-HDL-C or triglycerides.
          Does pregnancy alter life-course lipid trajectories? Evidence from the HUNT Study in Norway
        • Patient-Oriented and Epidemiological Research
          Open Access

          Associations of anthropometry and lifestyle factors with HDL subspecies according to apolipoprotein C-III

          Journal of Lipid Research
          Vol. 58Issue 6p1196–1203Published online: April 1, 2017
          • Manja Koch
          • Jeremy D. Furtado
          • Gordon Z. Jiang
          • Brianna E. Gray
          • Tianxi Cai
          • Frank Sacks
          • and others
          Cited in Scopus: 16
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            The presence of apoC-III on HDL impairs HDL's inverse association with coronary heart disease (CHD). Little is known about modifiable factors explaining variation in HDL subspecies defined according to apoC-III. The aim was to investigate cross-sectional associations of anthropometry and lifestyle with HDL subspecies in 3,631 participants from the Diet, Cancer, and Health study originally selected for a case-cohort study (36% women; age 50–65 years) who were all free of CHD. Greater adiposity and less activity were associated with higher HDL containing apoC-III and lower HDL lacking apoC-III.
            Associations of anthropometry and lifestyle factors with HDL subspecies according to apolipoprotein C-III[S]
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