|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Hepatic biochemical changes as a result of acute cocaine administration in the mouse.

First Author  Boyer CS Year  1991
Journal  Hepatology Volume  14
Issue  6 Pages  1209-16
PubMed ID  1959871 Mgi Jnum  J:2785
Mgi Id  MGI:51307 Citation  Boyer CS, et al. (1991) Hepatic biochemical changes as a result of acute cocaine administration in the mouse. Hepatology 14(6):1209-16
abstractText  The biochemical mechanism of cocaine hepatotoxicity is thought to involve enzymatic formation of reactive metabolites. The exact hepatocellular effects of these metabolites have yet to be established. This study was designed to monitor, in a time course after an acute cocaine dose, biochemical parameters that are important in cellular defense and homeostasis in vivo. The hepatic parameters measured were ATP as an indicator of cellular energetic status, reduced and oxidized glutathione, NADH and NADPH as measures of redox changes, and thiobarbituric acid-reactive products and microsomal conjugated dienes to determine the extent of lipid peroxidation. In addition, serum ALT levels were determined at each time point to assess the extent of toxicity. Inbred mouse strains selected for their relative sensitivity (male DBA/2Ibg) and resistance (male C57BL/6Ibg) to cocaine-mediated hepatotoxicity were used in this study. Animals were given an acute 50 mg/kg intraperitoneal dose of cocaine, and at various times after administration the hepatic and serum determinations were made. The results of this study confirm the strain difference in cocaine-induced hepatotoxicity and also indicate that there are changes in the biochemistry of the liver that are brought about by acute cocaine administration. In particular, depletions of hepatic GSH, NADH, NADPH and ATP coupled with significant increases in oxidized glutathione were observed in the DBA mouse. C57BL mice showed similar decreases in reduced glutathione, NADH and NADPH but exhibited no significant depletion of hepatic ATP. A similar extent of lipid peroxidation was seen in both mouse strains after cocaine administration.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

2 Authors

0 Bio Entities

0 Expression