Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9152352 | Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of dietary supplementation with Vitamin E was studied in sensitized guinea pigs. After measurement of baseline airway reactivity and sensitization with ovalbumin, the animals were randomized into two groups: Group A, on a commercial feed and Group B, on dietary supplementation with oral Vitamin E (0.7Â IU/kg). These were challenged with inhaled ovalbumin after 4 weeks. The following outcomes were studied: airway responses to ovalbumin inhalation, airway reactivity, sodium and calcium ion influx in isolated tracheal cells, Na+ K+ ATPase and Ca2+ATPase activity in tracheal homogenate and plasma malonaldehyde. Sensitization increased airway reactivity in Group A but not in Group B. The tracheal cells of animals in Group B showed significantly lower rates of 45Ca and 22Na influx and lower activities of tracheal Na+ K+ ATPase and Ca2+ATPase as compared to Group A. Plasma malonaldehyde was similar between two groups. We concluded that Vitamin E suppresses the increase in airway reactivity following sensitization and has membrane stabilizing actions.
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Authors
Deepika Jain, S.K. Chhabra, H.G. Raj,