Artículo
Vitamin E protective effects on genomic and cellular damage caused by paediatric preventive supplementation for anaemia: an experimental model
Fecha de publicación:
02/2023
Editorial:
Cambridge University Press
Revista:
British Journal of Nutrition
ISSN:
0007-1145
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Iron deficiency is the leading cause of anaemia. In Argentina, the prevalence of anaemia and iron deficiency is very high; for that reason, the Argentine Society of Pediatrics recommends daily ferrous sulphate supplementation as a preventive treatment strategy. Alternatively, weekly ferrous sulphate supplementation has also been shown to be effective for anaemia prevention. Excess iron could be related to oxidative stress, which may in turn cause cytomolecular damage. Both can be prevented with vitamin E supplementation. We evaluated the effect of both daily and weekly ferrous sulphate supplementation combined with two doses of vitamin E on cell viability, oxidative stress and cytomolecular damage in peripheral blood cultured in vitro. The experimental design included the following groups: untreated negative control, two vitamin E controls (8·3 and 16·6 g/ml), weekly ferrous sulphate supplementation (0·55 mg/ml) with each vitamin E dose, daily ferrous sulphate supplementation (0·14 mg/ml) with each vitamin E dose and a positive control. Daily ferrous sulphate supplementation decreased cell viability and increased the levels of reactive oxygen species, lipid peroxidation and cytomolecular damage (P < 0·5) compared with the weekly supplementation, probably due to the excess iron observed in the former. Vitamin E seemed to reduce ferrous sulphate-induced oxidative stress and genomic damage.
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Articulos(IGEVET)
Articulos de INST.DE GENETICA VET ING FERNANDO NOEL DULOUT
Articulos de INST.DE GENETICA VET ING FERNANDO NOEL DULOUT
Citación
Gambaro, Rocío Celeste; Seoane, Analia Isabel; Padula, Gisel; Vitamin E protective effects on genomic and cellular damage caused by paediatric preventive supplementation for anaemia: an experimental model; Cambridge University Press; British Journal of Nutrition; 129; 3; 2-2023; 468-477
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