Forty-six patients with xanthomatosis and elevated very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) levels (in different types of hyperlipoproteinaemia) were classified on the basis of the WHO criteria and the cholesterol/triglyceride ratio in VLDL. A large majority (31/46) of the patients referred to the Department of Dermatology could be classified as hyperlipoproteinaemia type III, only 8/46 as type IIB and 7/46 as type IV/V. This distinction seems to be relevant as the xanthomatous lesions differed distinctly between these three types of hyperlipoproteinaemia. Xanthochromia striata palmaris was present in 29/31 cases of hyperlipoproteinaemia type III and was not found in type IV/V patients, who had distinctive papuloeruptive xanthomas. During a follow-up in 35/46 patients all xanthomas disappeared within 2 years except the xanthelasma palpebrarum and tendinous xanthomas. All type IV/V patients (7/7) but only one type III patient (1/31) had abnormal glucose tolerance. Only 2/18 type III patients less than 45 years showed claudication and none of the young type III patients had angina pectoris. In contrast, all four type IIB patients less than 45 years had clinical signs of atherosclerosis. However, angina pectoris and/or claudication were present in 5/13 type III patients over 45 years old. The mean serum cholesterol level was equally elevated in both groups but the cholesterol was mainly present in VLDL in type III and in low density lipoproteins (LDL) in type IIB. In 9/31 type III patients the LDL level was also elevated but was easily normalized by a diet low in carbohydrate, whereas the elevated LDL level in type IIB was therapy-resistant. The recognition of xanthomatous lesions, specifically xanthochromia striata palmaris, as an early sign of type III hyperlipoproteinaemia, can lead to the early diagnosis and successful treatment of these patients, and thus possibly prevent the development of premature atherosclerosis.
The penetration through the epidermis in vitro of various topically used corticosteroids was compared. The amount penetrating through the epidermis from an ethanolic solution showed good correlation with the polarity of the corticosteroids under study. Hydrocortisone, the most polar corticosteroid, penetrates the epidermis the most rapidly; clobetasone butyrate, the least polar, the slowest. Other corticosteroids, i.e., hydrocortisone-17-butyrate, triamcinolone acetonide, and clobetasol-17-propionate, form an intermediate group whose penetration rates and polarities decrease in the indicated sequence. The corticosteroid generally accepted as having greater clinical efficacy in creams or ointments did not permeate better from an ethanolic solution in vitro.
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