I'm slightky interested in knowing if alcohol potentiates the effect of nitroglycerin. Out of interest one time, I was trying to figure out the associating of nitroglycerin and the nuof mber methemoglobins, and if it was an actual concern giving a lot of nitroglycerin (it was the only reason I figured a limit existed), but then I read about nitroglycerin IV, and I believe I read that nitroglycerin IV is stored/mixed with alcohol, and figured the patient would probably die from alcohol poisoning befote having to worry about methemoglobinemia.
Guess this would be a good time to master nitroglycerin and figure this out together.
Nitroglycerin (NTG) = Glycerol Trinitrate (GTN) (you'll see people from outside of the US call it GTN, thry don't have it backwards)
Glycerol is propanol-1,2,3
Prop is from propane, an alkane, or fully saturated hydrocarbon group. Meth = 1, Eth = 2, Prop = 3, But = 4, Pent = 5, Hex = 6, Hept = 7, Oct = 8, Non = 9, Dec = 10. E.g. Methame is 1 carbon, and it's full saturated so when you draw it out, you can put a hydrogen on every side to every carbon. I think the gormula you could use is # of hydrogen = (# of carbon x 2) + 2, or something like that (going off my head amd typing this on my phone so hopefully not wrong, lol). Propane is C3H8.
The -ol ending would mean that it's an alcohol, or one of the hydrogen has a hydroxyl grpup instead (-OH). So propanol is C3H8O.
But the 1,2,3 would mean their is a hydroxyl group attached to the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd carbon. Propanol-1,2,3 is C3H8O3. So that should be glycerol if I did everything correctly (It's easier for me to draw).
Then glycerol trinitrate, or nitroglycerin, is a nitrate instead of the hydroxyl (that confused me, but whatever). So instead of -OH attached to each carbon, it's NO3. Nitroglycerin is C3H5O9N3 I think....
Anyhow, spray nitroglycerin into the body, something like aldehyde dehydrogenase cleaves off a nitrate from nitroglycerin, the nitrate (NO3) becomes nitric oxide (NO) which is a known vasodilator. I think the NO goes through the cell membrane, attaches to guanynyl cyclase, release cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which is the thing that makes the vessel dilate.
Forgive me if I got some or all of this wrong, but this is what I think right now and it'll lead me to my question.
I think ethanol (Eth, 2 carbons, would be fully saturated with hydrogen ethane C2H6, but ends with -ol so one hydrogen is replaced with -OH hydroxyl group so C2H6O) becomes acetaldehyde (the thing that is toxic to our body and is reddish so makes some asians red if they drink a lot) becomes acetic acid by acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, acetic acid becomes acetyl-CoA, I forget the enzyme that does that. Acetyl-CoA gets used up by the Kreb's Cycle.
I think acetaldehyde dehydrogenase, or maybe it was aldehyde dehydrogenase, causes the vasodilation, and somehow causes an increase in cGMP.
So I wonder if they both use the same mechanisms to cause vasodilation, if this could increase the numher of cGMP significantly, or if alcohol and nitroglycerin kind of compete because I think they probably use the same enzymes, or something.
Some gaps in what I know, but think this would be interesting to fil in, and I am pretty sure nitroglycerin IV is stored/mixed with alcohol so in a sense, to me, makes me think it's okay to use nitroglycerin on somebody intoxicated.