scholarly journals Changes in Levels of Liver Malondialdehyde, Liver and Serum Vitamin E, Serum GOT and GPT Activities, and Pathological Changes of Liver in the Case of Massive Liver Necrosis in Rats Fed a Low Casein, Vitamin E Deficient Diet

1982 ◽  
Vol 46 (11) ◽  
pp. 2645-2658
Author(s):  
Naoko Harada ◽  
Yohei Takahashi
1968 ◽  
Vol 22 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Bunyan ◽  
A. T. Diplock ◽  
M. A. Cawthorne ◽  
J. Green

1. When chicks were given a fat-free casein–gelatin diet and, after 2 weeks of age, 0·15% silver acetate in the drinking water, they were found to have colourless exudates mainly in the pectoral region and partly in the peritoneal and pericardial spaces. Vitamin E and selenium, separately and together, failed to prevent this condition. Vitamin E was required together with methionine to prevent the condition. Methionine itself induced green staining of a few of the exudates.2. When lard was added to the casein–gelatin diet and the chicks were also given Ag, some green exudates were found in addition to the colourless ones. Addition of vitamin E or Se or both prevented the green exudates, but raised the incidence of colourless exudates. Methionine enhanced the green exudate condition, but again when combined with vitamin E prevented both types of exudate.3. A similar condition characterized by colourless exudates was induced by giving chicks diets based upon gelatin, yeast BPC, α-protein (with extra salts) or α-protein with gelatin. A torula yeast diet induced green exudates and haemorrhages.4. All the basal diets, which were deficient in sulphur amino acids, produced dystrophy of the breast muscle. Four of these diets contained no fat. Some diets also induced dystrophy of the gizzard. Vitamin E and Se protected against both these lesions. Methionine was protective in all except the torula yeast diet.5. Ethionine induced muscular dystrophy in chicks given a vitamin E-deficient diet adequate in sulphur amino acids. Additional methionine or vitamin E was protective, but cystine was not. Ethionine also produced a small incidence of green exudates and slight haemorrhages. This condition was prevented by vitamin E but not by methionine. The liver damage due to ethionine was not prevented by vitamin E, methionine or cystine.6. Liver necrosis was induced in rats by giving them an 8·3% casein diet and Ag, 130–1000 ppm, in the drinking water or the diet. Necrosis was produced even in the absence of dietary fat. Vitamin E and DPPD (N,N′-diphenyl-p-phenylenediamine) prevented necrosis, but adenine sulphate (0·25%), methionine (0·15%) and IONOX 330 (2,4,6-tri-(3′,5′-di-tert.-butyl-4′-hydroxybenzyl) mesitylene) did not. Se, 0·05 ppm, protected against 130 ppm Ag, but 1000 ppm Ag overcame the protective effect of 1 ppm Se. Similarly, 3 ppm cyanocobalamin was partly protective against 130 ppm Ag, but not against the higher concentration. Gold chloride (1000 ppm Au) had a mildly necrotic effect against which vitamin E did not protect. Neither copper sulphate (500 ppm Cu) not arsanilic acid (70 ppm As) induced liver necrosis.7. A high intake of Se (20 ppm as sodium selenate) was necrogenic in rats given a 10% casein diet; vitamin E and methionine did not protect. Vitamin E and cystine raised the low incidence of an exudative condition found in rats given 20 ppm Se. Methionine opposed this action of vitamin E.8. It was concluded that exudative diathesis in chicks could be resolved into a simple exudative condition and a superimposed haemorrhagic condition. Ag is a pro-exudative factor. Vitamin E and Se are also pro-exudative for chicks given the casein–gelatin–lard–Ag treatment. Torula yeast, methionine, lard, Ag (with lard) and ethionine are all pro-haemorrhagic factors. Se and Ag have an antagonistic relationship in rats and chicks; in chicks, however, Se synergizes with Ag when the supply of methionine is limited.


1967 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. T. Diplock ◽  
J. Green ◽  
J. Bunyan ◽  
D. Mchale ◽  
I. R. Muthy

1. When weanling rats were given a vitamin E-deficient diet and 0.15% (w/v) silver acetate in their drinking water, there was a high incidence of liver necrosis and death after 2–4 weeks. This was prevented by 120 ppm D-α-tocopheryl acetate in the diet, was partially prevented by selenium at 1 ppm but not at 0.05 ppm and was only marginally prevented by 0.15% DL-methionhe.2. All these effects were observed when the diet was free of fat and when it contained either methyl oleate or polyunsaturated methyl esters. The polyunsaturated lipid slightly increased the velocity of the terminal illness.3. In spite of the ‘anti-vitamin E’ effect of Ag and the clear demonstration that α-tocopherol played a major part in preventing toxicity, experiments with tracer amounts of [5-Me-14C]-D-α-tocopherol showed that rather than there being any destruction of tocopherol in the critical period preceding the onset of disease, there was an increase in tocopherol in the liver due to Ag administation. The metabolism of tocopherol in the remainder of the animal was unaffected during the pre-necrotic phase.4. The results are inconsistent with the view that the stress induced by Ag is caused by a pro-oxidant effect, either in the gastro-intestinal tract or in the tissues of the rat. They show that lipid peroxidation is not a causal factor in the aetiology of Ag-induced liver necrosis and suggest that stress in the vitamin E-deficient animal probably raises the requirement for tocopherol.


Heliyon ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. e07339
Author(s):  
Daniel Edem Kpewou ◽  
Faustina O. Mensah ◽  
Collins A. Appiah ◽  
Huseini Wiisibie Alidu ◽  
Vitus Sambo Badii

1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (10) ◽  
pp. 909-918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Margaret Fedelesova ◽  
Prakash V. Sulakhe ◽  
John C. Yates ◽  
Naranjan S. Dhalla

Feeding a vitamin E deficient diet to rats for 10 weeks was found to decrease myocardial creatine phosphate, ATP, ATP/ADP ratio, NAD+, NADP+, and NADPH, whereas the level of ADP was increased without any changes in the levels of AMP, total adenine nucleotides, NADH, and ATP/AMP ratio. The levels of ATP and pyridine nucleotides were restored fully, whereas creatine phosphate was restored partially on feeding a normal diet for 4 weeks to animals previously on the vitamin E deficient diet for 10 weeks. Vitamin E deficiency was found to increase cardiac lactate, pyruvate, and lactate/pyruvate ratio and decrease the activities of lactate dehydrogenase and malate dehydrogenase. The activity of Na+–K+-stimulated, ouabain-sensitive ATPase was markedly elevated in the hearts of animals on the vitamin E deficient diet. The ATP-dependent calcium accumulation by the sarcoplasmic reticular fraction in the absence and presence of P1 or oxalate was greater in the vitamin E deficient heart. Vitamin E deficiency also increased the Ca2+-stimulated ATPase activity of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. Although myocardial contractility of the hearts from vitamin E deficient rats was depressed, no damage to the ultrastructures of mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum was apparent. These results indicate marked alterations in myocardial metabolism due to vitamin E deficiency and it is suggested that such changes are due to abnormalities in the processes of both energy production and utilization.


1998 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Z. Koçer-Büyükbingöl ◽  
B. Aygen ◽  
M. Ekim

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