Dietary arachidonic acid reduces fatty liver, increases diet consumption and weight gain in ethanol‐fed rats

Abstract
We fed young male Sprague‐Dawley rats for 4 wk ad libitum liquid diets containing 34% of the calories as ethanol and 35% as fat with (AA+) and without (AA−) arachidonic acid (20∶4). Additional rats in the control groups were fed similar diets made isocaloric with dextrose with (CA+) and without (CA−) 20∶4. The liver triglyceride (TG) content of rats in the AA+ group was reduced ca. 3‐fold over that of rats in the AA‐group. The diet consumption and body wts of rats in the AA+ group were significantly greater than those of rats fed alcohol without the 20∶4 supplement (AA−). Also livers from rats in the AA+ group were as large as those from rats in control groups (CA+, CA−) and ca. twice as large as those from rats in the AA‐group. The fatty acid composition of liver TG in rats fed the alcohol diet was similar to that of dietary fat. Levels of 20∶4 and docosatetraenoic acid (22∶4) in liver TG fatty acids from rats fed diets without arachidonate (AA−, CA−) were low (trace to 1.6%). After ingestion of arachidonic acid, 20∶4 increased to ca. 10% and 22∶4 to ca. 5%. The content of liver phospholipids was higher in livers of rats fed ethanol (AA−) than in those of controls (CA−).

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