Rao G A, Goheen S C, Manix M, Larkin E C
Toxicol Lett. 1980 Nov;7(1):37-40. doi: 10.1016/0378-4274(80)90082-x.
Male Sprague-Dawley rats were pair-fed for 8 weeks either an alcohol diet or a control diet made isocaloric with dextrose. Those on the alcohol diet were then fed the control diet for 3 days and both groups were killed. Analysis of the fatty acid composition of the various blood lipids showed that the relative level of 18:2 to 20:4 was significantly greater in the phosphatidylcholine fraction from erythrocytes of rats withdrawn from alcohol as compared to that from control animals. It has been suggested that in alcohol-fed animals the hepatic capacity to produce 20:4 from 18:2 is reduced. Therefore the increase in the ratio of 18:2/20:4 in erythrocyte phosphatidylcholine could serve as an index to detect the liver malfunction and to confirm recent chronic alcohol consumption.