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Alcohol and Alcoholism Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 81-86, 2002
© 2002 Medical Council on Alcohol

CONCENTRATIONS OF LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDE-BINDING PROTEIN, BACTERICIDAL/PERMEABILITY-INCREASING PROTEIN, SOLUBLE CD14 AND PLASMA LIPIDS IN RELATION TO ENDOTOXAEMIA IN PATIENTS WITH ALCOHOLIC LIVER DISEASE{dagger}

Christian Schäfer,*, Alexandr Parlesak1, Christine Schütt2, J. Christian Bode3 and Christiane Bode1

Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Internal Medicine, Robert-Bosch-Krankenhaus, 70376 Stuttgart,
1 Department of Physiology of Nutrition, Hohenheim University, 70599 Stuttgart and
2 Department of Immunology, University of Greifswald, 17489 Greifswald, Germany

Received 23 March 2001; first review notified 11 July 2001; accepted 1 August 2001

— There is increasing evidence that gut leakage in persons with chronic alcohol misuse leads to endotoxaemia, which might contribute to the development of alcoholic hepatitis or cirrhosis. In addition, it was recently shown that the endotoxin-binding capacity of whole blood is reduced in these patients. To analyse this phenomenon, we measured the concentration of functionally important endotoxin-binding plasma components which modify the action of endotoxin. In patients with minimal (n = 10), intermediate (n = 9), and cirrhotic alcoholic liver disease (n = 11), and healthy controls (n = 11), plasma endotoxin was determined in a limulus assay. The concentration of lipoproteins was assessed by measuring apolipoproteins, the other factors were directly measured in immunoassays. In the entire group of alcoholics, endotoxin and the concentration of binding factors that are involved in the action of endotoxin on its target cells (LPS-binding protein and sCD14) were increased. Endotoxin antagonists, such as bactericidal/permeability-increasing protein and high-density lipoprotein, were increased in the pre-cirrhotic stages, whereas a significant reduction of the latter was observed in cirrhosis. Low-density lipoprotein remained unchanged. The elevation of binding factors in the pre-cirrhotic stages of alcoholic liver disease might attenuate the effects of endotoxaemia, whereas in cirrhosis the reduction of high density lipoprotein, to which large quantities of endotoxin bind, may contribute to its pro-inflammatory effects.


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