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Fasting, non-fasting and postprandial triglycerides for screening cardiometabolic risk

Bryant H. Keirns, Christina M. Sciarrillo, Nicholas A. Koemel, Sam R. Emerson

2021Journal of Nutritional Science78 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Fasting triacylglycerols have long been associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) and other cardiometabolic conditions. Evidence suggests that non-fasting triglycerides (i.e. measured within 8 h of eating) better predict CVD than fasting triglycerides, which has led several organisations to recommend non-fasting lipid panels as the new clinical standard. However, unstandardised assessment protocols associated with non-fasting triglyceride measurement may lead to misclassification, with at-risk individuals being overlooked. A third type of triglyceride assessment, postprandial testing, is more controlled, yet historically has been difficult to implement due to the time and effort required to execute it. Here, we review differences in assessment, the underlying physiology and the pathophysiological relevance of elevated fasting, non-fasting and postprandial triglycerides. We also present data suggesting that there may be a distinct advantage of postprandial triglycerides, even over non-fasting triglycerides, for early detection of CVD risk and offer suggestions to make postprandial protocols more clinically feasible.

Topics & Concepts

PostprandialMedicineTriglycerideFasting glucoseInternal medicineTriglycerides bloodEndocrinologyPhysiologyCholesterolObesityInsulinInsulin resistanceDiet, Metabolism, and DiseaseDiet and metabolism studiesFatty Acid Research and Health
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