Excretion of chlordecone by the gastrointestinal tract: evidence for a nonbiliary mechanism.

Publication/Presentation Date

5-1-1979

Abstract

Workers exposed to chlordecone (Kepone), a toxic organochlorine pesticide, excreted larger amounts of chlordecone in bile than in stool, suggesting that it may undergo enterohepatic recirculation. We found in a single subject that equal amounts of chlordecone and of its reduced metabolite, chlordecone alcohol, were excreted in bile at a rate four times as great as in stool. When biliary contents were diverted from the intestine through a T tube, fecal excretion of chlordecone alcohol was abolished, presumably due to interruption of its passage via bile to intestine. This change was not accompanied by disappearance of chlordecone from the stool. The amount of chlordecone in stool when bile was diverted was increased six- to tenfold over that when diverted bile was continuously infused into the duodenum. Analogous experiments with [14C]-chlordecone-treated rats in which bile flow was exteriorized through a plastic cannula showed that the excretion of radioactivity in feces was in the same range when bile was reinfused in the duodenum or was totally diverted. Moreover, in rats with bile diverted, cholestyramine, an anion-exchange resin which binds chlordecone in vitro, doubled the excretion of radioactivity in stool. A similar effect was observed in intact animals. We conclude that chlordecone enters the intestinal lumen from a nonbiliary source, probably the gut, and that net excretion of chlordecone from this source can be augmented by cholestyramine.

Volume

25

Issue

5 Pt 1

First Page

579

Last Page

585

ISSN

0009-9236

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

86403

Department(s)

Department of Medicine

Document Type

Article

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