Abstract
This study is conducted to investigate the effect of oral theophylline administration on total (TC), free (FC), short-(SC), long-chain acyl (LC), acyl (AC) carnitine concentrations and acyl to free carnitine (AC/FC) ratio in rat heart. Theophylline was administrated at 100 mg/kg wt/day, and effects were monitored after a treatment period that lasted between a week and five weeks. The results indicated that theophylline feeding leads to significantly higher concentrations of TC, FC, SC, LC and AC in heart tissue as compared to those of control and placebo groups (P < 0.001). Moreover, the ratio of AC/FC was significantly increased (P < 0.001) as compared to either control or placebo groups. These changes may result from theophylline-enhanced mobilization of lipids from adipose tissues, which consequently stimulates an increased carnitine transport into the heart tissues to form fatty acylcarnitines for subsequent beta-oxidation inside the heart mitochondria.