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Surgical treatment effect on the liver lecitin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) in schistosomiasis mansoni

Schistosomiasis mansoni is a tropical disease and remains as an important public healthy problem in Northeast - Brazil, where it is highly endemic. This disease has the liver as the major focus of its histological lesions, physiopathological alterations and clinical manifestations. Previous studies have shown alteration on lipid metabolism in the hepatosplenic form of Schistosomiasis. One of the main alterations is the reduction on lecithin: cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity, an hepatic enzyme that catalyze the esterification of cholesterol in plasma In this work, we evaluate the LCAT activity in plasma from patients with hepatosplenic Schistosomiasis mansoni who were subjected to a new surgical treatment, which consists of splenectomy followed by auto-transplantation of spleen tissue. LCAT activity was detected by using a radioactive substrate. Both [14C]free and esterified cholesterol produced by the LCAT reaction were separated by thin layer chromatography, and the sample radioactivity was counted in a liquid scintilation analyzer. LCAT activity from plasma of patients subjected to splenectomy and spleen tissue implantation were reduced by 32 %, in comparison to the control group. However, in Schistosoma mansoni patients who were only clinically treated the reduction on LCAT activity was twice (64%) as much as that found in plasma of patients subjected to splenectomy and spleen tissue implantation. These results suggest a significant improvement on LCAT activity after the surgical treatment of patients with the hepatosplenic form of Schistosomiasis mansoni.

Schistosomiasis mansoni; LCAT; Lipid metabolism; Spleen tissue implantation; Splenectomy


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