In choice situations, the golden Syrian hamster shows a strong preference to drink an ethanol solution to water alone. Because of the known effects of ethanol on lipid metabolism, its effects on liver fatty acids were therefore studied in the hamster. After a period of 8 weeks during which hamsters had consumed water containing 10% ethanol (4 weeks) and then 15% ethanol (4 weeks), the liver was significantly increased in weight, an effect which was shown to be due to fat accumulation as triglyceride. The fatty acid composition of the liver triglycerides and phospholipids was altered such that monounsaturated fatty acids were very significantly increased and both n-6 and n-3 essential fatty acids were proportionally decreased.
Hamsters fed ethanol were given three different dietary sources of essential fatty acids; safflower oil, evening primrose oil (both mainly n-6 fatty acids) or linseed oil (mainly n-3 fatty acids). After 7 weeks, plasma, erythrocyte and liver lipids and fatty acids were analyzed. Plasma and liver lipids were not significantly different in the ethanol-fed hamsters compared to the controls. Erythrocyte total phospholipid was increased only in the ethanol-fed groups given n-6 but not n-3 fatty acids. Some fatty acid changes induced by ethanol were predictable, e.g. lower 20:4 n-6 in hamsters fed n-6 fatty acids, but others were not predictable, e.g. higher 22:6 n-3 in all the ethanol-fed groups. The effect of ethanol on hamster lipids and fatty acid composition appears dependent on the predominant class of dietary fatty acids.
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