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The Clearance Rate of Chylomicron Retinyl Ester from Plasma Can Be Used to Distinguish Rats with Cirrhosis from Those with Portacaval Shunt

โœ Scribed by Tetsuhiro Kasai; Hisataka Moriwaki; Masataka Okuno; Satoshi Numaguchi; Nobuo Murakami; Mitsuru Seishima; Hiroo Ohnishi; Yoshihiro Shidoji; Yasutoshi Muto


Book ID
102850904
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
751 KB
Volume
17
Category
Article
ISSN
0270-9139

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โœฆ Synopsis


Effects of carbon tetrachloride treatment and portacaval shunt surgery on exogenous chylomicron retinyl ester clearance from rat plasma were analyzed assuming three-compartment model kinetics. In rats with cirrhosis and in those with Eck fistulas, the relative pool size of compartment 2 decreased (0.20 and 0.36, respectively) compared with controls (0.82). The relative mass of compartment 3 significantly increased in rats with cirrhosis (1.55) or Eck fistula (0.19) compared with control rats (0.11). The cirrhotic and Eck fistula groups were indistinguishable on the basis of these parameters and on the basis of indocyanine green test values. However, the cirrhosis and Eck fistula groups differed clearly from each other with respect to fractional efflux rate constants (I2, Is), where the constant I, is from compartment 2 and the I, is from compartment 3. Both values decreased in cirrhotic rats, suggesting that the hepatic uptake of chylomicron retinyl esters was impaired by carbon tetrachloride. On the other hand, Eck fistula rats did experience dramatic increases in I,, implying that the hepatic uptake of chylomicron retinyl esters from compartment 3 was enhanced by portacaval shunting. Elevation of the plasma estrogen level observed in Eck fistula rats may be responsible for the induction of low-density lipoprotein receptors on hepatocytes and for the subsequent enhancement of I,. These results suggest that a three-compartment model of plasma retinyl ester disappearance kinetics gives important quantitative information about hepatic function. Clinical application of the chylomicron retinyl ester clearance test is discussed for estimating hepatic function reserves and for differential diagnosis of portal hypertension. (HEPATOLOGY 1993;17:125-130.) Recent advances in the metabolic study of retinoids have confirmed that the liver is of major and critical


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