Abstract
The identification of the main diene-conjugated "free-radical marker" in human serum led to a study of free-radical activity in chronic alcoholics. 66 patients were investigated immediately after alcohol withdrawal and over 1-4 weeks' follow-up. The control groups were 76 normal subjects, 78 patients with liver disease, 30 patients on long-term antiepileptic drug treatment, 9 pregnant women, and 99 unselected hospital patients. 82% of chronic alcoholics had a significantly higher than normal level of phospholipid-esterified 9,11 linoleic-acid isomer in blood collected within 24 h of their last alcoholic drink. The levels fell to normal over the next 2-4 days but continued to decline within the normal range for 2-3 weeks. There was no rise in the level of the isomer in normal controls after an acute alcohol load. The results-suggest that chronic alcoholism may induce a specific detoxifying mechanism which is activated by alcohol and which entails or depends on greatly increased free-radical activity. © 1985.
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CITATION STYLE
Fink, R., Marjot, D. H., Cawood, P., Iversen, S. A., Clemens, M. R., Patsalos, P., … Dormandy, T. L. (1985). INCREASED FREE-RADICAL ACTIVITY IN ALCOHOLICS. The Lancet, 326(8450), 291–294. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(85)90347-2
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