Relationship between hepatic lipid peroxidation and fibrogenesis in carbon tetrachloride-treated rats: effect of zinc administration

1992 ◽  
Vol 83 (6) ◽  
pp. 695-700 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordi Camps ◽  
Teresa Bargallo ◽  
America Gimenez ◽  
Silvia Alie ◽  
Joan Caballeria ◽  
...  

1. Lipid peroxidation and hepatic fibrogenesis were investigated in 25 carbon tetrachloride-treated rats and in 25 control animals. Rats were further divided into two groups to receive either a standard diet or one supplemented with zinc. From each group, animals were killed at weeks 3 and 18 of the experiment for histological and biochemical assessments which included hepatic lipid peroxide and collagen concentrations and plasma zinc concentration as well as the hepatic activities of proline hydroxylase and collagenase. 2. Results indicated that oral zinc supplementation was associated with a decrease in lipid peroxidation (mean 51%; P<0.05), collagen deposition (mean 32%; P< 0.001) and proline hydroxylase activity (mean 30%; P<0.05) at week 18, together with an increase in collagenase activity (mean 208%; P<0.01) at week 3, in carbon tetrachloride-treated rats. 3. There was a significant direct correlation between lipid peroxidation and proline hydroxylase activity in carbon tetrachloride-treated rats (r = 0.52; P<0.01) and also a significant inverse correlation between lipid peroxidation and plasma zinc concentration in these animals (r = −0.62; P<0.001). 4. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that hepatic lipid peroxidation plays an important role in the aetiology of hepatic fibrogenesis and that zinc mitigates the process.

1990 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. S14 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Camps ◽  
T. Bargálló ◽  
S. Alié ◽  
A. Giménez ◽  
J. Caballerla ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Pablo Muriel ◽  
Nicolas Alba ◽  
Victor M Pérez-Álvarez ◽  
Mineko Shibayama ◽  
Victor K Tsutsumi

2013 ◽  
Vol 57 (3) ◽  
pp. 348-355 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ryan Wessells ◽  
Sonja Y. Hess ◽  
Noel Rouamba ◽  
Zinewendé P. Ouédraogo ◽  
Mark Kellogg ◽  
...  

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 132-133
Author(s):  
MICHAEL H. N. GOLDEN ◽  
BARBARA E. GOLDEN

To the Editor.— Kumar and Anday1 describe three premature infants presenting with edema and hypoproteinemia—the classical signs of kwashiorkor—between 5 and 9 weeks of age. Such cases are not uncommon in developing countries. Kumar and Anday's patients had low plasma zinc concentrations (43, 37, and 42 µg/dL). On this basis the authors claim that edema and hypoproteinemia is a clinical presentation of zinc deficiency not previously reported. We reported2 a clear association between "nutritional" edema and a low plasma zinc concentration in 1979; our subsequent experience has confirmed that edema of this type is always associated with a low plasma zinc concentration, as indeed Kumar and Andays' cases demonstrate.


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