vein-stenosed rats without affecting the degree of mes-The hemodynamic effects of long-term administration enteric-systemic shunts. (HEPATOLOGY 1996;23:537-543.) of octreotide in portal hypertension has not been established. In addition, whether long-term octreotide treatment prevents the developmen
Effects of short-term and long-term administration of amiodarone on hepatobiliary function in male rats
โ Scribed by Robert A. Young; Harihara M. Mehendale
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 545 KB
- Volume
- 9
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0260-437X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Functional, biochemical and histological parameters of hepatotoxicity were assessed in male Sprague-Dawley rats receiving amiodarone (Am) short-term by gavage (5, 50, 150 and 500 mg Am kg-' day-', 10 days) or dietary exposure (50 ppm, 1500 ppm, 4-week duration), or by long-term dietary exposure (50 ppm, 8-month duration). Serum enzyme (ALT, AST, ICD) levels and histopathological examination indicated no observable evidence of toxicity among rats of any of the treatment groups. Reduced food intake and reduction in weight gain was observed for rats exposed short-term to 1500 ppm dietary Am. Assessment of hepatobiliary function in treated rats indicated that short-term and long-term dietary exposure to Am resulted in a compromised excretion of readily excretable phenolphthalein glucuronide (PG), although inanition may account for this effect in the 1500 ppm group. Rats receiving Am by gavage exhibited a reduction in biliary excretion of PG, which was not dose-dependent. Distribution of Am and its major metabolite, desethylamiodarone, was similar to previous reports wherein both compounds accumulated in adipose, lung and liver tissue. These data suggest that minor alterations of hepatobiliary function occur in the absence of histological alterations and may preceed biochemical changes, as assessed in this study.
* A preliminary report of these findings was presented at the 26th Annual Conference of the Society of Toxicology at Washington. DC (Tooxicologisr 7, 58 (1987)).
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