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1.
Can J Psychiatry ; 45(1): 63-6, 2000 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10696491

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the relationship among demographic data, anxiety, significant losses, depression, and irrational beliefs reported by first-offence shoplifters. METHOD: One hundred and six adult shoplifters who were first-time offenders completed a self-administered questionnaire. RESULTS: Men and women were equally likely to be arrested for this offence. The majority of offenders were poor and unemployed. Depression, but not anxiety, was the most common psychiatric disorder associated with shoplifting. Subjects with depression presented the greatest number of irrational beliefs related to shoplifting. CONCLUSIONS: The authors suggest 2 categories of shoplifters: those who shoplift through rational choice; and those for whom shoplifting is a response to depression or leads to the fulfillment of some psychological needs. In conclusion, shoplifting does not have a unitary motive, and the clinical implications are that the affective and cognitive aspects of shoplifters' behaviours must be taken into account.


Subject(s)
Anxiety/epidemiology , Attitude , Depression/epidemiology , Theft/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Anxiety/diagnosis , Anxiety/psychology , Canada , Catchment Area, Health , Compulsive Behavior/psychology , Depression/diagnosis , Depression/psychology , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prevalence , Severity of Illness Index , Social Behavior Disorders/epidemiology , Social Behavior Disorders/psychology , Surveys and Questionnaires , Theft/statistics & numerical data
2.
Can J Psychiatry ; 39(5): 300-2, 1994 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8044748

ABSTRACT

A survey of 1,649 shoplifting convictions at a Montreal area municipal court found that a relatively low percentage (3.2%) of the cases involved mentally ill patients and that there is a comparatively closer link between shoplifting and affective disorders, alcoholism and drug addiction. The survey also showed that shoplifting is related more to mental illness than to the use of psychotropic drugs. The authors therefore reject the hypothesis of pharmacogenic shoplifting which has been reported in some studies on small numbers of shoplifters.


Subject(s)
Mental Disorders/diagnosis , Theft/psychology , Adult , Comorbidity , Expert Testimony/legislation & jurisprudence , Female , Humans , Male , Mental Disorders/psychology , Mental Disorders/therapy , Middle Aged , Patient Care Team , Psychotropic Drugs , Risk Factors , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Substance-Related Disorders/rehabilitation , Theft/legislation & jurisprudence
3.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 37(3): 421-6, 1988 Feb 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3122762

ABSTRACT

Liver microsomal monooxygenase activities known to be ethanol-inducible were determined in female Sprague-Dawley rats after 2-week treatment with 1% (v/v) acetone. Daily acetone intake was in the order of 1.2 g/kg. The final body weight, liver weight and microsomal protein content of acetone-treated rats were identical to those of untreated controls. Microsomal NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity was also unaffected, while cytochrome P-450 content was only increased 12-18%. Ethanol-inducible p-nitrophenol hydroxylation, aniline hydroxylation and 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylation activities were enhanced 5.3-, 4.4- and 2.6-fold, respectively, by chronic acetone treatment. The sex-dependent inducing effect of ethanol on benzphetamine N-demethylation activity in female rats was not observed however, after acetone. Addition of acetone in vitro had a stimulatory effect on aniline hydroxylation by microsomes from control and acetone-induced rats. Acetone, however, was found to be a competitive inhibitor of p-nitrophenol hydroxylation activity (apparent Ki = 1.8 mM), an observation suggesting that p-nitrophenol is a more selective substrate than aniline for rat liver ethanol- and acetone-inducible cytochrome P-450j. Interruption of the chronic acetone treatment for 24 hr resulted in the almost complete disappearance of its inducing affects, this treatment apparently reproducing only the rapidly reversible preferential inducing effects of chronic ethanol administration. This experimental model of induction by acetone in the rat, when compared to chronic ethanol administration, would thus permit a more selective look at the consequences of these common inducing effects in particular, with respect to drug metabolism and toxicity in vivo, and this, in the absence of the hepatotoxic effects of ethanol itself.


Subject(s)
Acetone/pharmacology , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Ethanol/pharmacology , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , 7-Alkoxycoumarin O-Dealkylase , Animals , Enzyme Induction , Female , Kinetics , Microsomes, Liver/drug effects , Mixed Function Oxygenases/biosynthesis , NADPH-Ferrihemoprotein Reductase/metabolism , Oxidoreductases, N-Demethylating/metabolism , Oxygenases/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
4.
Biochem Pharmacol ; 34(8): 1211-6, 1985 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3873242

ABSTRACT

Liver microsomal mixed-function oxidase activities were determined in female Sprague-Dawley rats after 3 weeks of ethanol feeding and for up to 10 days after withdrawal. Ethanol (36% of total calories) was administered in a high fat liquid diet and was replaced isocalorically by carbohydrates in controls. Chronic ethanol feeding similarly enhanced both microsomal cytochrome P-450 content and benzphetamine N-demethylase activity, per mg of protein, and resulted in a disproportionate increase in both aniline hydroxylase and 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase activities. A 6- to 7-day withdrawal period was apparently necessary for the overall disappearance of these effects of ethanol. Marked differences, however, were seen in the time courses of return of these variables to control levels, as also indicated by changes, during this period and specially during the first 24 hr after withdrawal, in the apparent molar activity of the microsomal fraction with the three substrates tested. The results were interpreted as indicating that the distinct ethanol-inducible cytochrome P-450 isozyme, with a high specific activity toward aniline, undergoes a very rapid turnover in liver microsomes. Induction of another form of cytochrome P-450, differing from the former by its slower turnover rate, would explain the induction by ethanol of 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase activity. The withdrawal of ethanol was followed by a rapid but transient increase in benzphetamine N-demethylase activity above the ethanol-induced level, at a time when other activities were rapidly declining. This could suggest that the microsomal content of other cytochrome P-450 isozyme(s), with high specific activity toward this substrate, would also be temporarily altered during ethanol withdrawal. Important alterations in microsomal cytochrome P-450-dependent mixed-function oxidase activities occurred during the initial 24-hr period of withdrawal, even in the absence of a change in microsomal cytochrome P-450 content, indicating that the effects of chronic ethanol ingestion on hepatic drug-metabolizing enzyme activities may also be highly dependent on the proximity of ethanol intake.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/enzymology , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Mixed Function Oxygenases/biosynthesis , Substance Withdrawal Syndrome/enzymology , 7-Alkoxycoumarin O-Dealkylase , Aniline Hydroxylase/biosynthesis , Animals , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/biosynthesis , Enzyme Induction/drug effects , Female , Humans , Isoenzymes/biosynthesis , Oxidoreductases, N-Demethylating/biosynthesis , Oxygenases/biosynthesis , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Time Factors
5.
Can J Physiol Pharmacol ; 62(3): 266-71, 1984 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6609756

ABSTRACT

Chronic ethanol administration in female rats enhances the apparent molar activity of liver microsomes for aniline hydroxylation and 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylation. Microsomal cytochromes P-450 from ethanol-fed and control rats have been solubilized and partially resolved in six fractions by anion-exchange chromatography. Induction of aniline hydroxylase activity by ethanol was associated with marked increases in the turnover numbers of the more basic cytochrome P-450 containing fractions in a reconstituted aniline hydroxylation system. Cytochrome P-450, exhibiting by far the highest 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase activity, was eluted in a relatively acidic fraction; its turnover number with 7-ethoxycoumarin after ethanol consumption, however, did not differ significantly from that of the corresponding fraction from control microsomes. These observations suggest that induction of liver microsomal mixed function oxidases by ethanol may reflect the contribution of more than one cytochrome P-450 isozyme.


Subject(s)
Aniline Compounds/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Ethanol/pharmacology , Liver/enzymology , Oxygenases/metabolism , 7-Alkoxycoumarin O-Dealkylase , Animals , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/isolation & purification , Female , Hydroxylation , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Mixed Function Oxygenases/metabolism , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
6.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol ; 67(2): 166-77, 1983 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6836572

ABSTRACT

Female Sprague-Dawley rats were pair-fed a nutritionally adequate liquid diet containing either ethanol or isocaloric carbohydrate for 3 weeks. In vitro studies showed that chronic ethanol pretreatment preferentially increased the liver microsomal biotransformation of bromobenzene to p-bromophenol (via the toxic 3,4-epoxide) rather than to o-bromophenol (via the nontoxic 2,3-epoxide) and could thus potentiate bromobenzene hepatotoxicity. Bromobenzene administration (500 mg/kg body weight, ip), after an overnight fast, was associated in ethanol-pretreated rats with greater and accelerated liver glutathione depletion and subsequent decrease in liver cytochrome P-450 content than in controls. As assessed histologically and by determination of the rise in activities of serum enzyme markers of liver necrosis, chronic ethanol pretreatment, however, mainly resulted in earlier onset and resolution of bromobenzene-induced liver necrosis, with only a mild increase in the maximal severity of liver lesions. These results suggest that the twofold increase in liver microsomal bromobenzene 3,4-epoxidation by ethanol, being much less than that seen after phenobarbital pretreatment in our animal model and in that of others, is apparently not sufficient to markedly affect the severity of bromobenzene-induced liver toxicity.


Subject(s)
Bromobenzenes/metabolism , Ethanol/pharmacology , Liver/metabolism , Alanine Transaminase/blood , Animals , Aspartate Aminotransferases/blood , Biotransformation , Bromobenzenes/toxicity , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Female , Glutathione/metabolism , L-Iditol 2-Dehydrogenase/blood , Liver/drug effects , Liver/pathology , Necrosis , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
7.
Drug Metab Dispos ; 10(3): 246-50, 1982.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6125357

ABSTRACT

Chronic ethanol administration to female rats for 3 weeks was associated with a 60% increase in liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 content. This effect was accompanied by a similar increase in microsomal epoxide hydrase activity, in the presence of styrene oxide, and by significant increases in liver glutathione concentration and cytosolic glutathione S-transferase activities. A time-course study showed that the elevation of liver glutathione concentration seen after 3 weeks of ethanol consumption was a transient phenomenon, not observed after prolonged (23 weeks) ethanol intake and preceded, in the first 10-12 days of ethanol administration, by a decrease below control levels. The latter occurred at a time when the cytochrome P-450 content and the activity of glutathione S-transferases reached maximal increases to levels twice as high as those seen from 3 to 23 weeks of ethanol consumption. These observations show that chronic ethanol consumption may thus affect the hepatotoxicity of xenobiotics susceptible to cytochrome P-450-dependent bioactivation by influencing both this pathway and those involved in the inactivation of reactive metabolites. They also suggest that vulnerability of the liver to such hepatotoxins may be influenced by the duration of exposure to ethanol.


Subject(s)
Epoxide Hydrolases/metabolism , Ethanol/pharmacology , Glutathione Transferase/metabolism , Glutathione/metabolism , Liver/enzymology , Animals , Enzyme Activation/drug effects , Female , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains
8.
Gut ; 23(1): 8-13, 1982 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7056500

ABSTRACT

Liver regeneration is the common mechanism whereby a patient recovers form a liver injury. In the western world, ethanol is the single most important aetiological factor associated with liver disease, and it appears crucial to determine if ethanol interferes with liver regeneration. We studied the response to a 70% hepatectomy in 240 rats receiving a nutritionally adequate diet containing 36% of their calories as ethanol for three weeks and their pair-fed controls receiving a liquid diet where ethanol is isocalorically replace with carbohydrates. Criteria of liver regeneration were: incorporation of 3H-thymidine in hepatocyte DNA (cpm/10 microgram DNA) and number of hepatocyte labelled nuclei on autoradiography per 100 high power fields. Controls displayed the usual response with peak activity of liver regeneration at 24 hours. Consumption of ethanol was associated with a statistically significant reduction of liver regeneration by both criteria for up to 72 hours after a 70% hepatectomy and delayed the peak of regenerative activity by 24 hours. This inhibiting effect was not related to the presence of alcohol in blood nor to hepatic microsomal enzyme induction by ethanol nor to widespread necrosis of hepatocytes. This effect was reversible after one week of abstinence. This impairment of liver cell renewal by ethanol may be of major significance in the severity and outcome of alcohol-related liver injury.


Subject(s)
Ethanol/pharmacology , Liver Regeneration/drug effects , Animals , Female , Hepatectomy , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , Rats , Rats, Inbred Strains , Time Factors
9.
Adv Exp Med Biol ; 132: 51-6, 1980.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7424729

ABSTRACT

Ethanol induces in rat liver microsomes a form of cytochrome P-450 differing in substrate specificity from cytochrome P-450 species present in controls or in rats treated with phenobarbital or 3-methylcholanthrene. Its relative capacity to oxidize ethanol remained to be determined and was studied using highly purified cytochrome P-450 preparations and comparing their activity in a reconstituted microsomal ethanol oxidizing system (MEOS). On a molar basis, reconstituted MEOS activity was found to be highest when assayed with ethanol-inducible cytochrome P-450, intermediate with cytochrome P-450 from phenobarbital-treated rats, and lowest with cytochrome P-450 from controls or 3-methylcholanthrene-treated rats. A decrease in apparent Km for ethanol was also found to be associated with higher MEOS activity of ethanol-inducible cytochrome P-450. The induction by ethanol of a catalytically distinct form of cytochrome P-450, and the comparatively high ethanol oxidizing activity of this cytochrome P-450 species, are in accordance with the MEOS hypothesis.


Subject(s)
Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/biosynthesis , Ethanol/pharmacology , Liver/enzymology , Acetaldehyde/metabolism , Animals , Enzyme Induction/drug effects , Ethanol/metabolism , Female , In Vitro Techniques , Methylcholanthrene/pharmacology , Oxidation-Reduction , Phenobarbital/pharmacology , Rats , Substrate Specificity
12.
Can J Physiol Pharmacol ; 55(1): 34-41, 1977 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-402995

ABSTRACT

The effect of chronic ethanol administration on the hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 content and activities of NADPH - cytochrome P-450 reductase (EC 1.6.2.4), benzphetamine demethylase, aniline hydroxylase (EC 1.14.14.1), and of the microsomal ethanoloxidizing system were studied in various dietary models. When ethanol was given with linoleate as the only source of dietary lipid, the ethanol induction of these parameters was greater with diets containing 2 or 5% of total calories as linoleate than with diets containing 10% of total calories as linoleate. By contrast, when ethanol was given with high fat (35% of total calories) diets, the ethanol induction of these same parameters was slightly greater when linoleate provided 10% of total calories than when it provided 3% of calories. The apparent effect of dietary linoleate on the induction, by ethanol, of microsomal drug-metabolizing enzymes is markedly different when linoleate is given as the only source of dietary lipid as opposed to when it is given with other dietary lipids. Thus, conclusions on the effect of ethanol on hepatic microsomal drug-biotransformation enzymes, drawn from studies with dietary models in which linoleate provides the only source of dietary lipid, connot be extended to dietary modles of more complex lipid composition. When given as the only source of lipid, 2% of total calories in linoleate appears optimal for basal activity and inductibility, by ethanol, of mixed-function oxidases.


Subject(s)
Alcoholism/metabolism , Ethanol/metabolism , Linoleic Acids/metabolism , Liver/enzymology , Aniline Hydroxylase/metabolism , Animals , Benzphetamine/metabolism , Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System/metabolism , Enzyme Induction , Female , Humans , In Vitro Techniques , Liver/drug effects , Microsomes, Liver/drug effects , Microsomes, Liver/enzymology , NADPH-Ferrihemoprotein Reductase/metabolism , Rats
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