Effect of chronic ethanol administration on bromobenzene liver toxicity in the rat

1983 
Abstract Female Sprague-Dawley rats were pair-fed a nutritionally adequate liquid diet containing either ethanol or isocaloric carbohydrate for 3 weeks. In vitro studies showed that chronic ethanol pretreatment preferentially increased the liver microsomal biotransformation of bromobenzene to p -bromophenol (via the toxic 3,4-epoxide) rather than to o -bromophenol (via the nontoxic 2,3-epoxide) and could thus potentiate bromobenzene hepatotoxicity. Bromobenzene administration (500 mg/kg body weight, ip), after an overnight fast, was associated in ethanol-pretreated rats with greater and accelerated liver glutathione depletion and subsequent decrease in liver cytochrome P -450 content than in controls. As assessed histologically and by determination of the rise in activities of serum enzyme markers of liver necrosis, chronic ethanol pretreatment, however, mainly resulted in earlier onset and resolution of bromobenzene-induced liver necrosis, with only a mild increase in the maximal severity of liver lesions. These results suggest that the twofold increase in liver microsomal bromobenzene 3,4-epoxidation by ethanol, being much less than that seen after phenobarbital pretreatment in our animal model and in that of others, is apparently not sufficient to markedly affect the severity of bromobenzene-induced liver toxicity.
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