1. Induction of prothrombin synthesis by K-vitamins compared in vitamin K-deficient and in brodifacoum-treated rats.
- Author
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Craciun AM, Groenen-van Dooren MM, Thijssen HH, and Vermeer C
- Subjects
- Absorption, Animals, Blood Coagulation drug effects, Blood Coagulation physiology, Disease Models, Animal, Male, Rats, Rats, Inbred Lew, Vitamin K administration & dosage, Vitamin K analogs & derivatives, Vitamin K pharmacokinetics, Vitamin K 1 pharmacology, Vitamin K Deficiency metabolism, 4-Hydroxycoumarins pharmacology, Anticoagulants pharmacology, Prothrombin biosynthesis, Vitamin K pharmacology, Vitamin K 2 analogs & derivatives, Vitamin K Deficiency blood, Vitamin K Deficiency drug therapy
- Abstract
Vitamin K is a group name for a number of prenylated 2-methyl-1,4-naphtoquinones, which may differ in their ability to function as a cofactor for prothrombin biosynthesis. To quantify the bioactivity of different forms of vitamin K, two experimental animal systems are frequently used: vitamin K-deficient rats and anticoagulated rats. In this paper both models are compared, and it is shown that the results obtained depend on the model used. The main reason for this discrepancy is the difference in recycling of vitamin K-epoxide, which results in a 500 times higher vitamin K requirement in anticoagulated rats. Absorption and hepatic accumulation of long chain menaquinones seem to be restricted to a maximum, whereas also the lipophilic nature of long chain menaquinones may hamper the quinone-quinol reduction in anticoagulated animals. If these data may be extrapolated to patients, food items rich in K1 and MK-4 would be expected to influence the stability of oral anticoagulation to a much larger extent than food items primarily containing higher menaquinones.
- Published
- 1998
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