Japanese healthy male subjects were divided into two groups, i.e., a normal aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) group with a low Km isozyme of ALDH for acetaldehyde, and a deficient group without it. After intake of 0.4 g/kg alcohol, the deficient group showed high levels of blood acetaldehyde, facial flushing including an increased pulse rate and a fall in diastolic blood pressure, while the normal group did not manifest these changes. In the deficient group, the total kininogen concentration gradually decreased after alcohol intake due to a reduction in low molecular weight kininogen, and plasma prekallikrein remained unchanged. The normal group showed no significant changes in any of these values after alcohol intake. In an in vitro study with pooled plasma, the low concentrations of urinary kallikrein caused a decrease in the low molecular weight kininogen only. These results suggest that kinins released by acetaldehyde-induced activation of glandular kallikreins are associated with the changes in cardiovascular symptoms in deficient group which display flushing after alcohol intake.
Read full abstract