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Everything about Fibrates totally explained

In pharmacology, the fibrates are a class of amphipathic carboxylic acids. They are used for a range of metabolic disorders, mainly hypercholesterolemia (high cholesterol), and are therefore hypolipidemic agents.

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Fibrates prescribed commonly are:

Indications

Fibrates are used as accessory therapy in many forms of hypercholesterolemia, usually in combination with statins. Clinical trials do support its use as a monotherapy agent.
   Although less effective in lowering LDL, fibrates improve HDL and triglyceride levels (for example increase HDL levels and decrease triglyceride levels), and seem to improve insulin resistance when the dyslipidemia is associated with other features of Syndrome X (hypertension and diabetes mellitus type 2).

Mechanism

Fibrates are agonists of the PPARalpha receptor in muscle, liver, and other tissues. Activation of PPARalpha signaling results in:
  • Increased beta-oxidation in the liver
  • Decreased hepatic triglyceride secretion
  • Increased lipoprotein lipase activity, and thus increased VLDL clearance
  • Increased HDL
  • Increased clearance of remnant particles and many more

    Side effects

    Most fibrates can cause mild stomach upset and myopathy (muscle pain with CPK elevations). Since fibrates increase the cholesterol content of bile, they increase the risk for gallstones.
       In combination with statin drugs, fibrates cause an increased risk of rhabdomyolysis (idiosyncratic destruction of muscle tissue, leading to renal failure). A powerful statin drug, cerivastatin (Lipobay), was withdrawn because of this complication. The less lipophilic statins are less prone to cause this reaction, and are probably safer when combined with fibrates.

    Pharmacology

    Although used clinically since at least the 1930s(External Link), the mechanism of action of fibrates remained unelucidated until, in the 1990s, it was discovered that fibrates activate PPAR (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors), especially PPARα. The PPARs are a class of intracellular receptors that modulate carbohydrate, fat metabolism and adipose tissue differentiation.
       Activation of PPARs causes transcription of a number of genes on the DNA that facilitate lipid metabolism.
       Fibrates are structurally and pharmacologically related to the thiazolidinediones, a novel class of anti-diabetic drugs that also act on PPARs (more specifically PPARγ)
       Fibrates are a substrate of (metabolized by) CYP3A4.

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