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Acute effects of ethanol on hepatic uptake and distribution of narcotics in the isolated perfused rabbit liver
Author(s) -
Kreek Mary Jeanne,
Rothschild Marcus A.,
Oratz Murray,
Mongelli Joseph,
Handley Anne C.
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
hepatology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.488
H-Index - 361
eISSN - 1527-3350
pISSN - 0270-9139
DOI - 10.1002/hep.1840010509
Subject(s) - ethanol , morphine , perfusion , chemistry , pharmacology , methadone , cannula , narcotic , distribution (mathematics) , anesthesia , medicine , biochemistry , surgery , mathematical analysis , mathematics
This study was performed as an initial step in systematically defining the hepatic interactions between ethanol and opioids using a controlled in vitro system. The acute effects of ethanol on the initial uptake and distribution of long‐ and short‐acting narcotics were studied using isolated rabbit liver perfused with rabbit blood without or with ethanol. A pulse injection of 1.5 mg of 14 C‐labeled narcotic [methadone, 1‐α‐acetylmethadol (LAAM), morphine, or meperidine] was made into the portal vein cannula followed by perfusion for 2 min. Radioactivity was determined in liver homogenates and subcellular fractions; methadone and its metabolites were measured by thin‐layer chromatography with zonal scanning in each fraction. Ethanol preperfusion and concomitant ethanol perfusion did not effect hepatic uptake of methadone, LAAM, morphine, or meperidine. Although subcellular localization of morphine and meperidine differed from that of methadone and LAAM, perfusion with ethanol did not alter the acute hepatic uptake and distribution of any of the narcotics. These findings suggest that acute exposure to ethanol does not alter the acute hepatic disposition of narcotics.

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