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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The correlation among degrees of alcohol intoxication, facial flushing, blood alcohol concentration (BAC) and blood acetaldehyde level was studied in 117 male alcoholic patients who underwent various tests to assess alcohol influence. Blood samples were collected and alcohol and acetaldehyde levels were determined. BACs ranged from 29 to 577 mg/dl in all patients and from 200 to 299 mg/dl in 48 of them. Fifty-one patients could stand erect (mean BAC [+/- SD] = 189 +/- 80 mg/dl), while 48 showed apparently normal reaction to a walking and turning test (mean BAC = 192 +/- 78 mg/dl). Some of the cases having BACs over 300 mg/dl could still stand and walk while others with BACs under 100 mg/dl already showed psychomotor impairment. Facial flushing was recognized in 75% of the subjects. Acetaldehyde concentrations in 27 patients ranged from 24 to 147 micrograms/dl. Appearance of facial flushing was correlated with relatively high concentrations of blood acetaldehyde. Seven out of 10 healthy volunteers given 1.6 to 2.0 g/kg of alcohol as a control could do nothing but sleep after reaching peak BAC (mean = 232 +/- 21 mg/dl). These findings are taken to indicate a great difference in response to alcohol between alcoholics and healthy men. This study is the first to report the occurrence of facial flushing and raised blood acetaldehyde concentration among Japanese alcoholics.
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PMID:Degrees of alcohol intoxication in 117 hospitalized cases. 194

Aspirin (ASA) was tested in a group of 8 Oriental and 3 Occidental subjects who were shown in a previous study to respond to small doses of ethanol (0.06-0.25 g/kg) with facial flushing. They were compared to a similar group of 11 non-flushing Occidental subjects following a larger ethanol dose (0.37 g/kg) to determine if similar effects could be produced in less sensitive individuals. Control tests of blood ethanol and acetaldehyde (AcH) levels (calculated from breath), facial and neck skin temperatures, body sway (Romberg test), blood pressure, heart rate and 10 Subjective High Assessment Scales (SHAS-Judd, 1977) were conducted before and at 15, 30, 60 and 90 minutes after drinking ethanol as vodka in orange juice. The tests were repeated one week later one hour after receiving 0.64 gm of ASA orally. ASA produced slight changes in the early absorption of ethanol and small decreases in AcH levels in the flushing and non-flushing groups. Facial flushing was markedly reduced in the flushing group, but was slightly increased in the non-flushing Occidentals. Body sway was reduced by ASA in both groups. An alcohol-induced increase in heart rate in the flushing group was reduced with no change in blood pressure. SHAS subjective parameters were widely variable, but indicated that ASA produced reduced sleepiness and earlier relaxation in the flushing group. It is concluded that ASA can block alcohol-induced facial flushing in sensitive subjects and also reduces body sway in the Romberg test and alters some subjective feelings of alcohol intoxication.
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PMID:Aspirin attenuation of alcohol-induced flushing and intoxication in Oriental and Occidental subjects. 342 38

New reliable methods for the determination of acetaldehyde in human blood, either from separated plasma or from acid-precipitated whole blood, demonstrate that the blood of healthy Caucasians contains at most only extremely small amounts of acetaldehyde (less than 1 microM) after moderate alcohol intoxication. On the other hand, among about 50% of the Japanese population ethanol ingestion results in elevated blood acetaldehyde levels (10-50 microM) with consequent unpleasant cardiovascular responses such as facial flushing and tachycardia, apparently because of a lack of one of the acetaldehyde-oxidizing aldehyde dehydrogenase isozymes. Elevated acetaldehyde levels may eventually occur also among intoxicated Caucasian alcoholics, primarily as a consequence of abuse-induced loss of hepatic aldehyde dehydrogenase activity, but accentuated by an accelerated ethanol oxidation rate. The elevation is probably reversible, since no acetaldehyde is seen in alcoholics after abstinence and hospital treatment. There is thus little evidence that an elevation of acetaldehyde could serve as a marker for predisposition for alcoholism.
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PMID:Human blood acetaldehyde levels: with improved methods, a clearer picture emerges. 634 52