Non-toxicity of IV injected perfluorocarbon oxygen carrier in an animal model of liver regeneration following surgical injury

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Authors

Nieuwoudt, Martin J.
Engelbrecht, Gert H.C.
Sentle, Lebo
Auer, Roland E.J.
Kahn, Del
Van der Merwe, Schalk Willem

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Abstract

Lethal dose experiments in animals have demonstrated that second-generation perfluorocarbon oxygen carriers are remarkably non-toxic. However, this non-toxicity has not previously been demonstrated in a liver failure scenario. A surgical liver damage and regeneration model in rats was selected using a well-controlled cross tabulated study design. A large number of physiological, biochemical, and hematological parameters were measured. No indications were found that intravenously injected perfluorooctyl bromide emulsion was toxic at the concentrations employed, in either healthy or severe liver injury scenarios. Neither was there any significant impact on the rate of liver regeneration following the injuries. Bearing in mind prior human clinical studies, it is therefore safe to assume that perfluorocarbon emulsions are also non-toxic in bioartificial liver treatments.

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Keywords

Perfluorocarbon toxicity, Liver failure, Animal model, Bioartificial liver

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Citation

Nieuwoudt, M, Engelbrecht, GHC, Sentle, L, Auer, R, Kahn, D & Van der Merwe, SW 2009, 'Non-toxicity of IV injected perfluorocarbon oxygen carrier in an animal model of liver regeneration following surgical injury', Artificial Cells Blood Substitutes and Biotechnology, vol. 37, no. 3, pp. 1-21. [http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~content=t713597230]