2003
DOI: 10.1080/713611043
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Ethanol and Hormesis

Abstract: This article provides a detailed assessment of the toxicological and pharmacological literature concerning alcohol-induced biphasic dose-response relationships. The assessment reveals that alcohol-induced hormetic-like dose-response relationships are commonly observed, highly generalizeable according to model and endpoint and quantitative feature of the dose response. These findings have important implications affecting study design, animal model, and endpoint selection as well as clinical applications.

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Cited by 57 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 103 publications
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“…They also stated that regardless of actual response mechanisms, the similarity of dose-response characteristics likely reflected an important overall regulatory strategy built into the framework of a homeostatic control system. Calabrese and Baldwin (2003c) further noted that these collective findings closely resembled the biphasic hormetic responses to a wide range of toxic chemical agents that they had previously reported (Calabrese and Baldwin, 1997).…”
Section: Hormetic Alcohol (Ethanol)supporting
confidence: 71%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…They also stated that regardless of actual response mechanisms, the similarity of dose-response characteristics likely reflected an important overall regulatory strategy built into the framework of a homeostatic control system. Calabrese and Baldwin (2003c) further noted that these collective findings closely resembled the biphasic hormetic responses to a wide range of toxic chemical agents that they had previously reported (Calabrese and Baldwin, 1997).…”
Section: Hormetic Alcohol (Ethanol)supporting
confidence: 71%
“…For non-human mammalian biological end points (including, amongst others, the liver, kidney, heart, spleen, endocrine, embryonic development and birth weight), Calabrese and Baldwin's (2003c) assessment of the toxicological and pharmacological literature demonstrated ethanol-induced biphasic dose responses over a wide range. In most cases, the low-dose hormetic responses were judged to be statistically significant and reliable.…”
Section: Hormetic Alcohol (Ethanol)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The relationship between smoking or drinking dose and risk for stomach cancer has also attracted great interest as to whether strict dose-dependence or a U-shaped curve might be evident 77 . Recently, the risk of stomach cancer was reported to increase linearly with the smoking dose, but not with the drinking dose.…”
Section: Hormetic Effects Observed With Ethanolmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thereafter, for the purposes of this book, we will focus on chemical hormesis alone. Some of the most familiar examples of biphasic dose-responses include vitamins, alcohol, essential minerals, and many drugs (16,17,18,19,20). Hormesis has been measured using diverse endpoints in multiple biological systems (8).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%