Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48424
Title: Evaluation of acute and chronic hepatotoxic effects exerted by anabolic- androgenic steroid stanozolol in adult male rats
Authors: Boada, Luis D. 
Zumbado, Manuel 
Torres, Santiago
López, Antonio
Díaz-Chico, Bonifacio N. 
Cabrera, Juan J. 
Luzardo, Octavio P. 
UNESCO Clasification: 32 Ciencias médicas
3214 Toxicología
Keywords: Liver-Microsomes
Cell-Proliferation
Ethinyl Estradiol
Cytochrome-P-450
Metabolism, et al
Issue Date: 1999
Journal: Archives of Toxicology 
Abstract: Stanozolol (ST) is a 17 alpha-alkyl anabolic-androgenic steroid (17 alpha-AAS) often misused by athletes and bodybuilders. The use of anabolic-steroids by sportsmen and teenagers has increased dramatically, thus raising the question about their hepatotoxicity, specially those such as ST which are orally administered. Previously, we have reported diverse in vivo effects exerted by this steroid and published the existence of a highly specific ST-binding site in male rat liver microsomes. The existence of this binding site, the reported hepatic effects exerted in humans, and the very limited information about its potential hepatotoxicity led us to treat adult male rats acutely and chronically with ST and study different parameters that could indicate liver damage: serum levels of transaminases, concentration of monooxygenase enzymes in liver, liver membrane lipid peroxidation products, liver histopathology, and cell cycle/ploidy status of liver cells. In our study, no changes in serum transaminases or lipid peroxidation levels were obtained. However, acute stanozolol treatment significantly decreased the levels of cytochrome P450 (Cyt. P450) and cytochrome b(5) (Cyt. b(5)) during the first 48 h of treatment, while subsequently, at 72 and 96 h, these microsomal enzymes underwent a significant increase in their levels. In sharp contrast with this response to acute treatment, the content of these two enzymes during chronic treatment showed an important decrease. Interestingly, acutely and chronically ST-treated livers showed slight to moderate inflammatory or degenerative lesions in centrilobular hepatocytes. Flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that both acute and chronic ST treatment were capable of increasing the percentage of S-phase fraction (%SPF) of liver cells. These findings taken together clearly show that this steroid is capable of altering the liver capacity for metabolizing xenobiotics and indicate that high doses of ST could exert a proliferative effect on liver cells. Such data should be considered in risk evaluations for this compound.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/48424
ISSN: 0340-5761
DOI: 10.1007/s002040050636
Source: Archives of Toxicology[ISSN 0340-5761],v. 73, p. 465-472
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