 |  | 

Safety evaluation of alpha-lipoic acid (ALA).
Cremer DR, Rabeler R, Roberts A, Lynch B.
Abstract: The safety of the antioxidant alpha-lipoic acid (racemic form) (ALA), also called thioctic acid (CAS RN 1077-28-7) was assessed in acute and subchronic toxicity studies as well as in in vitro and in vivo mutagenicity/genotoxicity studies.
ALA was not acutely toxic to rats (LD(50)>2000mg/kg bw, OECD method 425). Administration of 31.6 or 61.9mg ALA/kg bw/day for 4 weeks to male/female Wistar rats did not show any adverse effects. Specifically, there was no significant difference between control and treated animals at 31.6 or 61.9mg ALA/kg bw with regard to body weight gain, feed consumption, animal behaviour, or haematological and clinical chemistry parameters.
Only the high-dose of 121mg ALA/kg bw was associated with slight alterations in liver enzymes as well as histopathological effects on the liver and mammary gland. ALA did not possess any mutagenic activity in the Ames assays conducted with various bacterial strains of Salmonella typhimurium.
Moreover, there was no evidence of genotoxic activity in a mouse micronucleus assay. The results of these studies support the safety of ALA. The no-observed-adverse-effect level (NOAEL) is considered to be 61.9mg/kg bw/day.
Regul Toxicol Pharmacol. 2006 Oct;46(1):29-41. Epub 2006 Aug 14.
|
Remember we are NOT Doctors and have NO medical training.
This site is like an Encylopedia - there are many pages, many links on many topics.
Support our work with any size DONATION - see left side of any page - for how to donate. You can help raise awareness of CAM. |
|