Abstract
Hypoprothrombinemic changes in blood coagulation parameters, such as prolongation of prothrombin time, increase in the level of plasma protein induced by vitamin K absence, and decrease in plasma prothrombin level, were detected in rats fed a vitamin K-deficient diet. These changes were enhanced by the administration of β-lactam antibiotics containing N-methyltetrazolethiol, thiadiazolethiol or methyl-thiadiazolethiol. Microsomal vitamin K epoxide reductase activity was suppressed with the maximum effect at 1–2 days after the treatment and with recovery, thereafter, gradually to the normal level after 5–7 days. Hypoprothrombinemic alterations in blood coagulation parameters following a single administration of antibiotic to vitamin K-deficient rats were somewhat delayed compared with the change in the epoxide reductase activity, but the effects of the antibiotic on both blood coagulation parameters and the enzyme activity disappeared completely 7 days after the antibiotic treatment. Antibiotic-induced depression of the epoxide reductase activity was observed even in the vitamin K sufficient rats, although the hypoprothrombinemic changes in the blood coagulation parameters did not develop. Vitamin K administration could normalize the blood coagulation parameters in the hypoprothrombinemic rats caused by treatment with the antibiotics but without recovery of the decreased epoxide reductase activity. These results suggest that some antibiotics inhibit liver microsomal vitamin K epoxide reductase, which causes hypoprothrombinemia to develop under vitamin K-deficient conditions.
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