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. 1966 Sep;100(3):768–774. doi: 10.1042/bj1000768

Influence of ethanol on the metabolism of perfused normal, fatty and cirrhotic rat livers

Mikko P Salaspuro 1, Pekka H Mäenpää 1
PMCID: PMC1265213  PMID: 5969289

Abstract

1. The influence of ethanol on the metabolism of perfused livers from normal rats and rats in various stages of development of dietary cirrhosis was studied. A choline-deficient, low-protein and high-fat diet was used. Results were obtained on oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production, on glucose release and uptake by the liver and on changes in the concentrations of lactate and pyruvate and of β-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate in the perfusion medium. 2. Oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production were lower in fatty and cirrhotic livers than in normal livers. Ethanol had no effect on the oxygen consumption of any of the various livers. After addition of ethanol to the perfusion medium carbon dioxide production ceased almost completely in normal livers. Only a slight decrease in the carbon dioxide production occurred in fatty and cirrhotic livers. 3. With every type of liver glucose was released from the liver into the perfusion medium during the initial control period. This release continued after the addition of ethanol to the perfusion medium in experiments with normal and fatty livers, whereas with cirrhotic livers a marked uptake of glucose from the medium was found. A simultaneous release of the glycolytic end products lactate and pyruvate into the medium occurred. 4. The production of ketone bodies was equal in normal and early fatty livers (6 weeks on the fat diet). It was smaller in late fatty livers (3–4 months on the fatty diet) and in cirrhotic livers. 5. The lactate/pyruvate concentration ratio in the perfusion medium increased from 11 to 67 with normal livers, from 12 to 16 with early fatty livers, from 13 to 26 with late fatty livers and from 21 to 55 with cirrhotic livers when the livers were perfused with a medium containing ethanol. The β-hydroxybutyrate/acetoacetate concentration ratio increased from 1·2 to 8·4 in normal livers, from 2·0 to 2·8 in early fatty livers, from 1·2 to 2·4 in late fatty livers and from 2·1 to 4·0 in cirrhotic livers when ethanol was added to the medium. 6. The effects of ethanol on liver metabolism during the development of dietary cirrhosis are discussed and related to human fatty liver and cirrhosis during chronic ethanol consumption.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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