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Subject: Moderate alcohol consumption increases oxidative stress in patients with chronic hepatitis C.


Author:
Rigamonti C, Mottaran E,: Hepatology. 2003 Jul;38(1):42-9.
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Date Posted: Sun, July 13 2003, 12:10:00 PDT
In reply to: Arch Intern Med 2002 's message, "Smoking and alcohol consumption are independently associated with disease progression" on Wed, April 17 2002, 7:52:29 PDT

Hepatology. 2003 Jul;38(1):42-9.


Moderate alcohol consumption increases oxidative stress in patients with chronic hepatitis C.

Rigamonti C, Mottaran E, Reale E, Rolla R, Cipriani V, Capelli F, Boldorini R, Vidali M, Sartori M, Albano E.

Internal Medicine Unit, Ospedale Maggiore della Carita, Novara, Italy.

The mechanisms by which alcohol consumption worsens the evolution of chronic hepatitis C (CHC) are poorly understood. We have investigated the possible interaction between hepatitis C virus (HCV) and ethanol in promoting oxidative stress. Circulating IgG against human serum albumin (HSA) adducted with malondialdehyde (MDA-HSA), 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE-HSA), or arachidonic acid hydroperoxide (AAHP-HSA) and against oxidized cardiolipin (Ox-CL) were evaluated as markers of oxidative stress in 145 CHC patients with different alcohol consumption, 20 HCV-free heavy drinkers (HD) without liver disease, and 50 healthy controls. Anti-MDA IgG was increased in CHC patients irrespective of alcohol intake as well as in the HD group. CHC patients with moderate alcohol intake (<50 g ethanol/d), but not HD, also had significantly higher values of anti-AAHP-HSA, anti-HNE-HSA, and anti-Ox-CL IgG (P <.05) than controls. A further elevation (P <.001) of these antibodies was evident in CHC patients with heavy alcohol intake (>50 g ethanol/d). Anti-AAHP and anti-Ox-CL IgG above the 95th percentile in the controls were observed in 24% to 26% of moderate and 58% to 63% of heavy drinkers but only in 6% to 9% of the abstainers. The risk of developing oxidative stress during CHC was increased 3-fold by moderate and 13- to 24-fold by heavy alcohol consumption. Heavy drinking CHC patients had significantly more piecemeal necrosis and fibrosis than abstainers. Diffuse piecemeal necrosis was 4-fold more frequent among alcohol-consuming patients with lipid peroxidation-related antibodies than among those without these antibodies. In conclusion, even moderate alcohol consumption promotes oxidative stress in CHC patients, suggesting a role for oxidative injury in the worsening of CHC evolution by alcohol.

www.hcop.org

PMID: 12829985 [PubMed - in process]

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Alcohol ups hepatitis C virus replication and it interferes with the effectiveness of interferon used to treat hepatitis CHo, etal, Hepatology, July 2003Sun, August 10 2003, 7:39:46 PDT



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