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Endogenous acetaldehyde in rats. Effects of exogenous ethanol, pyrazole, cyanamide and disulfiram
Authors:C J Eriksson
Affiliation:1. Beiersdorf AG, Hamburg, Germany;2. Pierre Fabre Dermo-Cosmétique, Toulouse, France;3. Unilever, Sharnbrook, UK;4. L''Oreal Research & Innovation, Aulnay-Sous-Bois, France;5. Cosmetics Europe, Brussels, Belgium;6. Procter and Gamble, Schwalbach am Taunus, Germany
Abstract:Male Long-Evans rats consumed the alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitors pyrazole, cyanamide or disulfiram, for 6 days. No endogenous blood acetaldehyde could be detected in controls and pyrazole treated rats, endogenous blood concentrations up to 2-5 nmoles/ml were, however, measured in the cyanamide and disulfiram-treated animals. Other rats received daily ethanol gastric intubations in addition to the consumption of the inhibitors. Little or no acetaldehyde was detected in the controls and pyrazole treated animals during acute ethanol intoxication or on the subsequent days. High blood levels (200-500 nmoles/ml) were observed in the rats consuming cyanamide and disulfiram, and concentrations up to 10-12 nmoles/ml were still found on the following day after all the ethanol had been eliminated. This acetaldehyde and the endogenous acetaldehyde could only be observed with the hemolyzation method in which blood hemolyzates were directly heated prior to headspace GC analysis; none was detected if blood proteins were first precipitated and removed with perchloric acid. It is suggested that aldehyde dehydrogenase inhibitors elevate endogenous concentrations of bound acetaldehyde and that exogenous ethanol increases this form of acetaldehyde.
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