Effect of food restriction on hepatotoxicity of carbon tetrachloride in rats.

Abstract
Five-week-old Sprague-Dawley rats of both sexes were assigned to two types of feeding condition. One was fed ad libitum (AL) on commercial chow and another was fed a restricted amount of the chow (FR), approximately 75% of that fed in the AL condition. In each feeding condition, animals were orally administered carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) at levels of 0 (control), 0.1 or 0.2 ml/kg 6 days a week for 8 weeks. Lesions of the liver (hepatic cellular degeneration and fibrosis) and of the kidney (proximal tubular vacuolation and glomerular sclerosis) induced by CCl4 were aggravated in the FR group. The FR-control showed a higher metabolic activity of aniline in the liver than the AL-control group. Plasma lipid-peroxide (LPO) level was higher in the AL-control group than in the FR-control group. With CCl4 0.2 ml/kg treatment, however, the plasma LPO level was reversed between the AL and the FR groups. Taking together these somewhat unexpected results, it was concluded that (1) 25% food restriction increases toxicity of repeatedly administered CCl4 in rats, and (2) aggravation of CCl4 toxicity may be partly due to enhanced metabolic activation of CCl4 resulting from food restriction.

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