Diverse mechanisms of hepatocellular injuries due to chemicals: evidence in rats administered carbon tetrachloride or dimethylnitrosamine.

  • 1 April 1975
    • journal article
    • Vol. 56  (2) , 103-12
Abstract
Differences in acute hepatotoxicity of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) and dimethylnitrosamine (DMN) have been tested in normal foetal, newborn and adult rats, foetal, newborn and adult rats pretreated with phenobarbitone and partially hepatectomized adult rats. While CCl4 is non-toxic to the foetal and newborn liver, DMN induces identical necrosis at all ages. Prior dosing with phenobarbitone augments CCl4 toxicity only in the adult and the newborn but the foetus continues to be resistant. Such pretreatment, on the other hand, significantly reduces the effects of DMN on liver in all animals. Partial hepatectomy makes the liver less susceptible to CCl4 and more so to DMN. Such diversities of hepatic response to the two toxins can be accounted for by the levels of the respective toxifying enzymes in the liver cell in different situations.