Age and Sex in the Development of Hepatic Encephalopathy: Role of Alcohol

  • Xiao Y. Tong
  • , Hussain Hussain
  • , Nagarajarao Shamaladevi
  • , Michael D. Norenberg
  • , Aya Fadel
  • , Omar El Hiba
  • , El got Abdeljalil
  • , Bilal El-Mansoury
  • , Deepak Kempuraj
  • , Sampath Natarajan
  • , Andrew V. Schally
  • , Miklos Jaszberenyi
  • , Luis Salgueiro
  • , Michael J. Paidas
  • , Arumugam R. Jayakumar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a neurological condition linked to liver failure. Acute HE (Type A) occurs with acute liver failure, while chronic HE (Type C) is tied to cirrhosis and portal hypertension. HE treatments lag due to gaps in understanding its development by gender and age. We studied how sex and age impact HE and its severity with combined liver toxins. Our findings indicate that drug-induced (thioacetamide, TAA) brain edema was more severe in aged males than in young males or young/aged female rats. However, adding alcohol (ethanol, EtOH) worsens TAA’s brain edema in both young and aged females, with females experiencing a more severe effect than males. These patterns also apply to Type A HE induced by azoxymethane (AZO) in mice. Similarly, TAA-induced behavioral deficits in Type C HE were milder in young and aged females than in males. Conversely, EtOH and TAA in young/aged males led to severe brain edema and fatality without noticeable behavioral changes. TAA metabolism was slower in aged males than in young or middle-aged rats. When TAA-treated aged male rats received EtOH, there was a slow and sustained plasma level of thioacetamide sulfoxide (TASO). This suggests that with EtOH, TAA-induced HE is more severe in aged males. TAA metabolism was similar in young, middle-aged, and aged female rats. However, with EtOH, young and aged females experience more severe drug-induced HE as compared to middle-aged adult rats. These findings strongly suggest that gender and age play a role in the severity of HE development and that the presence of one or more liver toxins may aggravate the severity of the disease progression.

Original languageEnglish
Article number228
JournalBiology
Volume13
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 by the authors.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology
  • General Immunology and Microbiology
  • General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

Keywords

  • alcohol
  • azoxymethane
  • brain edema
  • hepatic encephalopathy
  • thioacetamide

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