Volume 49, Issue 3 pp. 692-697
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Amino Acid Changes in Autopsied Brain Tissue from Cirrhotic Patients with Hepatic Encephalopathy

Joël Lavoie

Joël Lavoie

Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Hôpital Saint-Luc (University of Montreal), Montrèal, Quèbec, Canada

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Jean-Francois Giguère

Jean-Francois Giguère

Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Hôpital Saint-Luc (University of Montreal), Montrèal, Quèbec, Canada

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Gilles Pomier Layrargues

Gilles Pomier Layrargues

Liver Unit, Andrè- Viallet Clinical Research Center, Hôpital Saint-Luc (University of Montreal), Montrèal, Quèbec, Canada

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Roger F. Butterworth

Corresponding Author

Roger F. Butterworth

Laboratory of Neurochemistry, Hôpital Saint-Luc (University of Montreal), Montrèal, Quèbec, Canada

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. R. F. Butterworth at Laboratory of Neurochemistry, André-Viallet Clinical Research Center, Hôpital Saint-Luc (University of Montreal), 1058 St. Denis St., Montréal, Québec H2X 3J4, Canada.Search for more papers by this author
First published: September 1987
Citations: 162

Abstract

Abstract: Brain tissue was obtained at autopsy from nine cirrhotic patients dying in hepatic coma and from an equal number of controls, free from neurological, psychiatric, or hepatic diseases, matched for age and time interval from death to freezing of dissected brain samples. Glutamine, glutamate, aspartame, and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels were measured in homogenates of cerebral cortex (prefrontal and frontal), caudate nuclei, hypothalamus, cerebellum (cortex and vermis), and medulla oblongata as their O-phthalaldehyde derivatives by HPLC using fluorescence detection. Glutamine concentrations were found to be elevated two- to fourfold in all brain structures, the largest increases being observed in prefrontal cortex and medulla oblongata. Glutamate levels were selectively decreased in prefrontal cortex (by 20%), caudate nuclei (by 27%), and cerebellar vermis (by 17%) from cirrhotic patients. On the other hand, GABA content of autopsied brain tissue from these patients was found to be within normal limits in all brain structures. It is suggested that such region-selective reductions of glutamate may reflect loss of the amino acid from the releasable (neurotransmitter) pool. These findings may be of significance in the pathogenesis of hepatic encephalopathy resulting from chronic liver disease. Key Words: Hepatic encephalopathy—Hyperammonemia— Cerebral amino acids—Glutamine—Glutamate—γ-Aminobutyric acid. Lavoie J. et al. Amino acid changes in autopsied brain tissue from cirrhotic patients with hepatic encephalopathy.

Abbreviations used:

  • CSF
  • cerebrospinal fluid
  • GABA
  • γ-aminobutyric acid
  • OPA
  • O-phthalaldehyde
  • THF
  • tetrahydrofuran
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