Abstract

Male and female rats were fed an ordinary diet which contained about 500 ng vitamin K/g or a vitamin K-deficient diet containing less than 5 ng vitamin K/g. Hypoprothrombinemic changes such as prolongation of the prothrombin time (PT) and activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) were detected in male rats within 4–6 days after feeding of the vitamin K deficient diet. Blood clotting factor VII and descarboxy prothrombin (PIVKA) levels changed rapidly, with maximum alteration at 2–4 days. Similar changes in factor VII and PIVKA levels were observed in female rats, but they appeared only after feeding of the K deficient diet for a long period. PT and APTT in female rats showed slight or no alteration even after 10 day feeding of the K-deficient diet. These results indicate that male rats are more susceptible to vitamin K deficiency than female rats. Administration of latamoxef led to a dose-dependent development of hypoprothrombinemia in vitamin K-deficient female rats. The hypoprothrombinemia in vitamin K-deficient female rats was caused by beta-lactam antibiotics with N-methyltetrazolethiol, thiadiazolethiol and methyl-thiadiazolethiol as the 3’-position substituent of the cephem nucleus.

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