Alcohol Metabolism Flashcards
Liver damage
- acetaldehyde toxicity kept to a minimum by aldehyde dehydrogenase (low Km for acetaldehyde)
- prolonged and excessive alcohol consumption can cause sufficient acetaldehyde accumulation to cause liver damage
- excess NADH and acetyl-CoA lead to changes in liver metabolism
Fatty acid, alcoholic hepatitis, alcoholic cirrhosis
Alcoholic consumption
Lactic and Uric acid share the same excretory pathway
- irate crystals accumulate in tissues producing GOUT
- insufficient pyruvate fro gluconeogenesis
- lower lipoprotein synthesis - liver cannot export fat via LDLs - fatty liver
Treatment of alcohol dependence
Disulfiram
- blocks aldehyde dehydrogenase
- if patient drinks alcohol acetaldehyde will accumulate causing symptoms of a hangover
Alcohol metabolism (by zero order kinetics - linear - 7g/hr constant rate)
90% metabolised by liver (remained excreted in urine and on breath)
- alcohol oxidised by alcohol dehydrogenase to acetaldehyde and then to acetate by aldehyde dehydrogenase
- acetate converted to acetyl-CoA and used in TCA cycle or for FA synthesis
- smaller amounts can be oxidised by the cytochrome P450 2E1 enzyme or by catalase in the brain
RECOMMENDED LIMITS
- 21 units a week/ 4 units per day for men
- 14 unit a week/ 3 units per day for women
One unit = 8g of ethanol