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HIGH BLOOD ENDOTOXIN DOES NOT AFFECT ETHANOL ELIMINATION IN RATS

Authors :
Harri A. Järveläinen
T. Nosova
K. Jokelainen
Mikko Salaspuro
Kai O. Lindros
Source :
Alcohol and Alcoholism. 33:443-446
Publication Year :
1998
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 1998.

Abstract

Gut-derived endotoxins have been proposed as mediators of the enhancement of ethanol elimination after chronic alcohol administration. We investigated whether chronically elevated blood- endotoxin levels affect the rate of ethanol elimination in a study where endotoxin was administered chronically from an osmotic minipump to rats fed ethanol in a liquid diet. As expected, an acute dose of ethanol (1.2 g/kg body wt, i.p.) was eliminated significantly faster (329 ± 11 mg/kg/h) by chronically ethanol-fed animals than by pair-fed controls (285 ± 9 mg/kg/h). However, although endotoxin administration significantly elevated blood-endotoxin levels, the rate of ethanol elimination in endotoxin-treated groups was almost identical when compared either to controls (289 vs 285) or to ethanol-fed rats (328 vs 329). We conclude that chronic endotoxin exposure at levels that only resulted in mild hepatic changes, had no effect on the rate of ethanol elimination and that it is unlikely that endotoxins are involved in the induction of the ethanol elimination rate following chronic alcohol administration.

Details

ISSN :
14643502 and 07350414
Volume :
33
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Alcohol and Alcoholism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....34f5e7c0d3677972ed0946b307920ccc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/33.5.443