4.3 Article

Influence of small doses of various drug vehicles on acetaminophen-induced liver injury

Journal

CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 10, Pages 960-967

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING, NRC RESEARCH PRESS
DOI: 10.1139/Y10-065

Keywords

acetaminophen; dimethylsulfoxide; dimethylformamide; propylene glycol; ethanol; Tween 20; liver injury

Funding

  1. Croatian Ministry of Science, Higher Education and Sports [0108-0000000-0328]

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The biological effects of drug vehicles are often overlooked, often leading to artifacts in acetaminophen-induced liver injury assessment. Therefore, we decided to investigate the effect of dimethylsulfoxide, dimethylformamide, propylene glycol, ethanol, and Tween 20 on acetaminophen-induced liver injury. C57BL/6 male mice received a particular drug vehicle (0.6 or 0.2 mL/kg, i.p.) 30 min before acetaminophen administration (300 mg/kg, i.p.). Control mice received vehicle alone. Liver injury was assessed by measuring the concentration of alanine aminotransferase in plasma and observing histopathological changes. The level of reduced glutathione (GSH) was assessed by measuring total nonprotein hepatic sulfhydrils. Dimethylsulfoxide and dimethylformamide (at both doses) almost completely abolished acetaminophen toxicity. The higher dose of propylene glycol (0.6 mL/kg) was markedly protective, but the lower dose (0.2 mL/kg) was only slightly protective. These solvents also reduced acetaminophen-induced GSH depletion. Dimethylformamide was protective when given 2 h before or 1 h after acetaminophen administration, but was ineffective if given 2.5 h after acetaminophen. Ethanol at the higher dose (0.6 mL/kg) was partially protective, whereas ethanol at the lower dose (0.2 mL/kg) as well as Tween 20 at any dose had no influence. None of the vehicles (0.6 mL/kg) was hepatotoxic per se, and none of them was protective in a model of liver injury caused by D-galactosamine and lipopolysaccharide.

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