Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1967810 Clinica Chimica Acta 2006 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundCurrent methods to estimate antioxidant status of plasma have many associated difficulties including questionable sensitivity, unreliability, non-reproducible results and procedural difficulties. In addition, there is no significant elevation in the measured value of biomarkers of oxidative stress until pathological disease is already evident. We have developed a new method that eliminates many of these problems.MethodsThis new method includes 3 steps: (1) enzymatic removal of uric acid; (2) ex vivo free radical oxidation of plasma by the addition of a free-radical generator such as SIN-1 or AAPH; and (3) measurement of a marker of lipid peroxidation, 8-isoprostanes.ResultsIt has been shown in an in vitro experiment that the addition of various antioxidants to plasma significantly reduced the amount of free-radical induced 8-isoprostanes. In a human single dose supplementation clinical study with vitamin C, vitamin E, and grape seed and green tea extracts (on separate days) 8-isoprostane formation was also significantly reduced compared to no supplementation (74.2 to 53.8 ± 5.1 pg/ml for vitamin C).ConclusionsThe reduction in 8-isoprostane formation demonstrates that the total amount of antioxidant protection in the plasma can be increased with supplementation of antioxidants and this new method can effectively measure the plasma antioxidant reserve (PAR) in healthy subjects.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology Biochemistry
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