Byung-Hong Chung
Department of Medicine
School of Medicine
University of Alabama
Birmingham
USA
Name/email consistency: high
- Phosphatidylcholine-rich acceptors, but not native HDL or its apolipoproteins, mobilize cholesterol from cholesterol-rich insoluble components of human atherosclerotic plaques. Chung, B.H., Franklin, F., Liang, P., Doran, S., Cho, B.H., Curcio, C.A. Biochim. Biophys. Acta (2005)
- Postprandial chylomicrons: potent vehicles for transporting cholesterol from endogenous LDL+HDL and cell membranes to the liver via LCAT and CETP. Chung, B.H., Liang, P., Doran, S., Cho, B.H., Franklin, F. J. Lipid Res. (2004)
- Contribution of postprandial lipemia to the dietary fat-mediated changes in endogenous lipoprotein-cholesterol concentrations in humans. Chung, B.H., Cho, B.H., Liang, P., Doran, S., Osterlund, L., Oster, R.A., Darnell, B., Franklin, F. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. (2004)
- Alcohol-mediated enhancement of postprandial lipemia: a contributing factor to an increase in plasma HDL and a decrease in risk of cardiovascular disease. Chung, B.H., Doran, S., Liang, P., Osterlund, L., Cho, B.H., Oster, R.A., Darnell, B., Franklin, F. Am. J. Clin. Nutr. (2003)









