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Publication : Diet and murine atherosclerosis.

First Author  Getz GS Year  2006
Journal  Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol Volume  26
Issue  2 Pages  242-9
PubMed ID  16373607 Mgi Jnum  J:141599
Mgi Id  MGI:3818834 Doi  10.1161/01.ATV.0000201071.49029.17
Citation  Getz GS, et al. (2006) Diet and murine atherosclerosis. Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol 26(2):242-9
abstractText  Lipid-enriched diets are often used to induce or accelerate the rate of atherosclerotic lesion development in murine models of atherosclerosis. It appears that the induction of persistent hypercholesterolemia to levels > or approximately to 300 mg/dL is required for the development of experimental atherosclerosis in the mouse. A variety of different diets have been used that vary in the level of cholesterol, the level and type of fatty acid, and the absence or presence of cholate. Each of these components as well as the protein source has been shown to influence lipoprotein level and/or atherosclerosis, with dietary cholesterol being the major proatherogenic component. In some instances the effects of these components on the expression of hepatic genes relevant to lipid homeostasis has been observed. An appreciation of the effect of the differences in diet composition on these processes is important to compare results from different atherosclerosis studies, so the composition of the diets used should always be reported or referenced. Cholate should not be used unless its effects are being specifically investigated.
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