CORRELATIONS BETWEEN ACETALDEHYDE-MODIFIED HEMOGLOBIN, CARBOHYDRATE-DEFICIENT TRANSFERRIN (CDT) AND HEMATOLOGICAL ABNORMALITIES IN CHRONIC-ALCOHOLISM

Citation
Sn. Wickramasinghe et al., CORRELATIONS BETWEEN ACETALDEHYDE-MODIFIED HEMOGLOBIN, CARBOHYDRATE-DEFICIENT TRANSFERRIN (CDT) AND HEMATOLOGICAL ABNORMALITIES IN CHRONIC-ALCOHOLISM, Alcohol and alcoholism, 29(4), 1994, pp. 415-423
Citations number
27
Categorie Soggetti
Substance Abuse
Journal title
ISSN journal
07350414
Volume
29
Issue
4
Year of publication
1994
Pages
415 - 423
Database
ISI
SICI code
0735-0414(1994)29:4<415:CBAHC>2.0.ZU;2-W
Abstract
Serum levels of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT), the proporti ons of eight haemoglobin fractions separated by cation exchange liquid chromatography, indices of liver function and various haematological parameters were determined in most of a group of 49 chronic alcoholics who had misused alcohol for at least the preceding 3 months and in 15 healthy non-alcoholic control subjects. The percentages of alcoholics giving abnormally high values for gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) ac tivity, CDT levels, GGT activity or CDT levels or both, and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) activity were, respectively, 73.0, 71.0, 87.1 a nd 64.4. The percentages of patients giving abnormally high values for the proportion of HbA(1a), proportion of HbA(1ach), proportion of HbA (1a) or HbA(1ach) or both, MCH, MCV and red cell distribution width (R DW) were, respectively, 46.8, 25.5, 55.3, 55.3, 36.2 and 29.8. Reduced values for the red cell folate concentration, lymphocyte count and pl atelet count were found in 36.2%, 6.4% and 17.0%, respectively, of the alcoholics. When compared with the control subjects, the group of alc oholics showed statistically significant increases in the mean values for the MCV, MCH, MCHC and RDW and statistically significant decreases in the mean values for the haemoglobin distribution width (HDW) and t he logarithms of the holo-transcobalamin II concentrations and the pla telet count. The logarithms of the CDT values correlated directly with the MCV and MCH and inversely with the logarithms of the lymphocyte o r platelet counts and the HDW, suggesting but not proving that the hae matological changes in chronic alcoholism may be at least partly relat ed to defective glycosylation of the constituents of developing blood cells or, possibly, of haemopoietic growth factors. There was also a n umber of statistically significant direct correlations between the per centages of HbA(1a), HbA(1a+b) or HbA(1ach) and serum bilirubin concen trations or serum activities of alanine aminotransferase, AST or alkal ine phosphatase, showing some relationship between the formation of ac etaldehyde-protein adducts and impaired hepatocyte function. Studies o f 11 of the chronic alcoholics with an independent history of abstinen ce from alcohol for a least 3 months after detoxification revealed a f all in the MCV and an increase in the lymphocyte count, even in those patients whose pre-detoxification values were within the normal range.