Literature DB >> 110598

Effects of chlorpromazine hydrochloride on bile salt synthesis, bile formation and biliary lipid secretion in the rhesus monkey: a model for chlorpromazine-induced cholestasis.

E Ros, D M Small, M C Carey.   

Abstract

We studied the acute effects of intravenous infusions of chlorpromazine hydrochloride on bile salt synthesis, bile formation and biliary lipid secretion in the alert female Rhesus monkey prepared with a total biliary fistula and in a steady bile salt secretory state. In twelve studies (three animals), five doses of radiolabelled chlorpromazine hydrochloride (1-10 mg identical to 2.8-28 mumol/kg) were infused intravenously for 1 h in random order. Cholestasis was induced within minutes in all experiments. The radiolabel appeared rapidly in bile, with similar recoveries in bile and urine and a 90% total cumulative output in 4 days. Both bile flow, bile salt and other biliary lipid outputs were inhibited in a dose related and reversible manner. The apparent bile salt independent bile flow was consistently abolished, and a prompt return to basal values occurred when biliary concentration of the drug and metabolities fell below 1-2 mM. When chlorpromazine hydrochloride was infused at three doses (2.5, 5.0 and 10.0 mg identical to 7-28 mumol/kg) during constant intravenous infusion of 14C sodium taurocholate (300 mumol/h), bile flow, total bile salt output and 14C taurocholate output decreased within minutes. This was accompanied by a progressive rise in the serum 14C taurocholate concentration. After 90 min the taurocholate specific activity in bile increased significantly indicating that bile salt synthesis was inhibited. Secretion of retained bile salts and reversal of inhibition of bile salt synthesis occurred with time: the course of both events was correlated with the dose of the drug. Thus, in monkeys, chlorpromazine hydrochloride induces reversible, dose related cholestasis suppression of the bile salt dependent and independent flow, inhibition of bile salt synthesis and impairment of biliary lipid secretion. We suggest that these effects are due to both bile salt-chlorpromazine interactions and the effect of the latter on canalicular and other membranes.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 110598     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2362.1979.tb01664.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Clin Invest        ISSN: 0014-2972            Impact factor:   4.686


  12 in total

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Review 2.  Drug hepatotoxicity.

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5.  Arterialization of the portal vein in conjunction with a therapeutic portacaval shunt. Hemodynamic investigations and results in 75 patients.

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6.  Intrahepatic cholestasis and hyperbilirubinemia in ethynyl estradiol and chlorpromazine-treated rats.

Authors:  T Obata
Journal:  Gastroenterol Jpn       Date:  1983-12

7.  Effect of chlorpromazine on rat arterial lipid synthesis, in vitro.

Authors:  F P Bell; E V Hubert
Journal:  Lipids       Date:  1982-10       Impact factor: 1.880

8.  Relative cytotoxicity of psychotropic drugs in cultured rat hepatocytes.

Authors:  U A Boelsterli; P Bouis; P Donatsch
Journal:  Cell Biol Toxicol       Date:  1987-09       Impact factor: 6.691

9.  Effects of three different fibrates on intrahepatic cholestasis experimentally induced in rats.

Authors:  Alaa El-Sisi; Sahar Hegazy; Eman El-Khateeb
Journal:  PPAR Res       Date:  2013-08-12       Impact factor: 4.964

10.  Transcriptional, Functional, and Mechanistic Comparisons of Stem Cell-Derived Hepatocytes, HepaRG Cells, and Three-Dimensional Human Hepatocyte Spheroids as Predictive In Vitro Systems for Drug-Induced Liver Injury.

Authors:  Catherine C Bell; Volker M Lauschke; Sabine U Vorrink; Henrik Palmgren; Rodger Duffin; Tommy B Andersson; Magnus Ingelman-Sundberg
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