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Simvastatin attenuates intestinal ischaemia//reperfusion-induced injury in rat

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15921-18380-1-PB.pdf (174.5Kb)
Date
2009
Author
Hajipour, B
Somi, MH
Saberifar, F
Hemmati, MR
Asl, NA
Moein, A
Vatankhah, AM
Nourazar, AR
Nasirizade, MR
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Abstract
Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is commonly seen in the field of intestine surgical interventions, shock, trauma, and many other clinical conditions. Simvastatin is known to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. This study investigated the effect of simvastatin administration in a warm intestinal I/R model on TNF-?, antioxidant enzymes and intestinal tissue morphology. Thirty-six male wistar rats underwent laparotomy under general anaesthesia. Simvastatin was administered from four days before ischaemia induction. The rats were divided in to three groups (n = 12): the sham goup, the I/R group, and the I/R + simvastatin group. Intestinal ischaemia was induced by superior mesenteric artery ligation with microvascular clamps for 60 minutes, and after ischaemia, blood perfusion was released into the tissue and a reperfusion phase was started, which lasted for 3 hours. After 3 hours, the animals were sacrificed and serum and tissue obtained for biochemical and histological study. In the simvastatin treated group, intestinal tissue injury, TNF-? level, and tissue malondealdehyde levels were significantly lower than in the HR group (p < 0.05). Glutathion peroxidase and superoxide dismutase levels were significantly higher in the simvastatin treated group than in the I/R group (p < 0.05). Simvastatin pretreatment reduced intestinal I/R injury and was associated with down-regulation of serum TNF-? and tissue malondealdehyde level, and simvastatin administration maintained cellular antioxidant enzyme contents compared to the I/R group after 3 hours reperfusion time. Copyright © 2009 Via Medica.
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http://dspace.tbzmed.ac.ir:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/57819
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