Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids

Accuracy in measurement of plasma free fatty acids (FFA), and therefore prevention of the in vitro lipolysis, is a crucial step to understand the physiologic role of plasma FFA and their relationships in the pathogenesis of important metabolic disorders such as central obesity, insulin resistance, a...

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Main Authors: A Zambon, SI Hashimoto, JD Brunzell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1993-06-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520396875
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spelling doaj-7d4faae37c484b6b904b00213b7a435d2021-04-26T05:49:49ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751993-06-0134610211028Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acidsA Zambon0SI Hashimoto1JD Brunzell2Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle 98195.Accuracy in measurement of plasma free fatty acids (FFA), and therefore prevention of the in vitro lipolysis, is a crucial step to understand the physiologic role of plasma FFA and their relationships in the pathogenesis of important metabolic disorders such as central obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes mellitus. As lipoprotein triglyceride-fatty acids are elevated in these states, in vitro lipolysis of triglycerides may artifactually increase FFA. Plasma FFA were measured in subjects before and after heparin administration, under different experimental conditions affecting the in vitro activity of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic lipase (HL). Paraoxon, a cholinesterase inhibitor neurotoxin known to block plasma lipolytic activity, and preextraction timing and temperature of collection were tested. Paraoxon was required to prevent triglyceride hydrolysis in: a) preheparin plasma allowed to stand at room temperature (21 degrees C) for 2 h, before being frozen at -20 degrees C (FFA = 1817 +/- 291 vs. 698 +/- 66 microEq/l, P < 0.005, mean +/- SEM, without and with paraoxon, respectively); and b) in postheparin plasma immediately stored at -20 degrees C (FFA = 2682 +/- 357 vs. 1299 +/- 150 microEq/l, P < 0.005, without and with paraoxon, respectively). No difference in the FFA level was found in preheparin plasma collected either with or without paraoxon when: a) the samples were placed in ice and immediately assayed; b) the specimens were immediately frozen at -70 degrees C and assayed 60 days later.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520396875
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A Zambon
SI Hashimoto
JD Brunzell
spellingShingle A Zambon
SI Hashimoto
JD Brunzell
Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
Journal of Lipid Research
author_facet A Zambon
SI Hashimoto
JD Brunzell
author_sort A Zambon
title Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
title_short Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
title_full Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
title_fullStr Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
title_sort analysis of techniques to obtain plasma for measurement of levels of free fatty acids
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1993-06-01
description Accuracy in measurement of plasma free fatty acids (FFA), and therefore prevention of the in vitro lipolysis, is a crucial step to understand the physiologic role of plasma FFA and their relationships in the pathogenesis of important metabolic disorders such as central obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes mellitus. As lipoprotein triglyceride-fatty acids are elevated in these states, in vitro lipolysis of triglycerides may artifactually increase FFA. Plasma FFA were measured in subjects before and after heparin administration, under different experimental conditions affecting the in vitro activity of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) and hepatic lipase (HL). Paraoxon, a cholinesterase inhibitor neurotoxin known to block plasma lipolytic activity, and preextraction timing and temperature of collection were tested. Paraoxon was required to prevent triglyceride hydrolysis in: a) preheparin plasma allowed to stand at room temperature (21 degrees C) for 2 h, before being frozen at -20 degrees C (FFA = 1817 +/- 291 vs. 698 +/- 66 microEq/l, P < 0.005, mean +/- SEM, without and with paraoxon, respectively); and b) in postheparin plasma immediately stored at -20 degrees C (FFA = 2682 +/- 357 vs. 1299 +/- 150 microEq/l, P < 0.005, without and with paraoxon, respectively). No difference in the FFA level was found in preheparin plasma collected either with or without paraoxon when: a) the samples were placed in ice and immediately assayed; b) the specimens were immediately frozen at -70 degrees C and assayed 60 days later.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520396875
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