pubmed-article:1148928 | pubmed:abstractText | Adult male rats were pair-fed liquid diets, providing 37% of calories as ethanol or sucrose, for 1 month. Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity in the cytosol fractions of liver homogenates from the two groups did not differ with respect to total activity per 100 g body weight, Km for ethanol, or Ki for pyrazole. Other rats, fed in the same way, were fasted for 18-24 H, then given an intraperitoneal injection of pyrazole followed 1 h later by an injection of ethanol, 3g/kg. Blood alcohol curves showed an unexplained slower rise to maximum level in the chronic alcohol group. Both groups showed a period of several hours in which the blood alcohol stayed at the respective maximum concentrations, which were higher in the control group. After 7-8h the alcohol concentration began to fall in both groups, significantly more rapidly in the chronic alcohol-fed animals. A kinetic analysis shows that the results are adequately explained by the known effects of pyrazole on the ADH-mitochondrial system. The results are interpreted as evidence against the function of any microsomal ethanol oxidizing system in vivo. | lld:pubmed |