• Hum Exp Toxicol · Feb 2011

    The role of heart-type fatty acid-binding protein in the evaluation of carbon monoxide poisoning in rats.

    • Turker Yardan, Murat Meric, Ayhan Bozkurt, Sirri Bilge, Duygu Belkis Bas, Abdulkerim Bedir, Tulay Ozdemir, and Ahmet Baydin.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, Ondokuz Mayis University, Samsun, Turkey. tyardan@yahoo.com
    • Hum Exp Toxicol. 2011 Feb 1; 30 (2): 124-8.

    AbstractAcute carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning can cause early and persistent damages in tissues sensitive to hypoxia. This study investigated serum heart-type fatty acid-binding protein (H-FABP) levels as a biomarker of acute CO poisoning in rats. The rats were exposed to a mixture of either 3000 (group A) or 5000 (group B) parts per million (ppm) CO in air, or to ambient air (group C, control group). Blood samples were taken just before, immediately after and 6 hours after the exposure, and serum H-FABP and troponin-I levels were measured. The consciousness level was evaluated just after the exposure. The survival rate was monitored for 7 days. Serum H-FABP levels increased just after the CO exposure in both groups A and B. Additionally, H-FABP level was higher in group B than in group A, immediately after the exposure. However, serum troponin-I levels only increased at 6 hours after the CO exposure in groups A and B. Consciousness and survival rates in group B were lower than that in group A. Our results suggest that H-FABP might have potential to be an early and quantitative parameter of clinical severity and prognosis in CO poisoning.

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