To examine the effect of the exposure pattern on the inhalation toxicity of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) two 4-week inhalation studies with this compound were carried out in male rats at basic exposure concentrations of 63 and 80 ppm and basic exposure periods of 6 hours per day, 5 days per week. The
Effects of carbon tetrachloride, menadione, and paraquat on the urinary excretion of malondialdehyde, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde, and acetone in rats
✍ Scribed by Bagchi, D. ;Bagchi, M. ;Hassoun, E. ;Moser, J. ;Stohs, S. J.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 598 KB
- Volume
- 8
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-2082
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Excretions of the lipid peroxidation products, formaldehyde (FA), acetaldehyde (ACT), malondialdehyde (MDA), and acetone (ACON), were simultaneously identified and quantitated in the urine of female Sprague‐Dawley rats by gas chromatography‐mass spectroscopy (GC‐MS) and high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC) following the acute administration of carbon tetra‐chloride, a model alkylating agent that does not induce glutathione depletion, and the redox cycling compounds paraquat and menadione. All three xenobiotics are well‐known inducers of oxidative stress. Oxidative stress was induced by oral administration of single doses of 2.5 mL of carbon tetrachloride/kg, 60 mg menadione/kg, and 75 mg paraquat/kg. These doses are approximately 50% of the LD~50~'s for the three xenobiotics. Urinary excretion of FA, ACT, MDA, and ACON increased relative to control animals following treatment with all xenobiotics. Over the 48 hours of the study, the greatest increases in the excretion of MDA, FA, ACT, and ACON occurred after paraquat administration, with increases of approximately 2.7‐, 2.6‐, 4.3‐, and 11.0‐fold, respectively. This technique may have wide‐spread applicability as an effective biomarker for investigating altered lipid metabolism in disease states and exposure to environmental pollutants/xenobiotics.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Although the depletion of hepatic glutathione in male rats following treatment with phorone (diisopropylidene acetone) did not affect the xenobiotic-metabolizing microsomal enzyme system, the metabolic elimination of vinylidene chloride (VDC) from the atmosphere of a closed exposure system was inhib
In animal models, conflicting results on the effect of occur in as many as 10% to 15% of cirrhotic patients. 2,3 cirrhosis on glucose metabolism have been reported. Furthermore, the majority of nondiabetic cirrhotic indi-The use of various toxins as well as differences in experividuals are character
This study was planned to investigate the protective effect of l(+)-ascorbic acid (Vit C) on CCl(4)-induced hepatotoxicity and oxidative stress in the liver of Wistar rats (Rattus Norvegicus, strain Wistar). Twenty-four adult male Wistar rats were fed with standard rat chow diet for 10 days and rand
The relationships between the pharmacokinetic behaviour of glycyrrhizin and its restorative eect for hepatic function were investigated in patients with chronic hepatitis and in rats chronically treated with carbon tetrachloride (CCl 4 -treated rats). In patients, the restorative eects in plasma asp