Abstract
Abstract
Plasma disappearance of sulfobromophthalein (BSP) after an intravenous bolus (5 mg/kg) was determined in six lab chow-fed (LCF) rabbits and in six rabbits maintained on total parenteral nutrition (TPN) for 5 days. A common bile duct cannula enabled measurements of bile flow and biliary BSP excretion. Compartmental analysis of the biexponential plasma disappearance curve yielded three fractional transfer rates, plasma to liver (hepatic uptake), liver to plasma (reflux), and liver to bile (canalicular excretion). The transfer rates for hepatic uptake were 0.253 ± 0.061/min for LCF and 0.147 ± 0.040/min for TPN (P < 0.01) and for the canalicular excretion of BSP were 0.038 ± 0.019/min for LCF and 0.019 ± 0.002/min for TPN (P < 0.05). Model-computed rates for BSP excretion in bile over 60 min were lower with TPN (61%) than with LCF (80%); the measured excretory rates were 53% for TPN rabbits and 75% of injected dose for LCF animals. Basal biliary flow was reduced by 50% in the TPN group. With a two-compartmental model, assuming two pools and three transfer rates, we have demonstrated for the first time significant decreases in hepatic uptake and canalicular excretion of the organic anion BSP during TPN. A decrease in hepatic blood flow due to the enteral fast of TPN could have contributed in part to the decreased hepatic uptake. But, because the second exponent of the biexponential curve is independent of hepatic blood flow, the decrease in liver to bile transfer rate is a true approximation of a diminished canalicular excretory capacity during TPN. It is concluded that the movement of organic anions along the hepatic BSP/bilirubin transport system is impaired early during TPN.
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