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Evidence-based Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2013

Anacardic acids from cashew nuts ameliorate lung damage induced by exposure to diesel exhaust particles in mice.

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Ana Laura Nicoletti Carvalho
Raquel Annoni
Larissa Helena Lobo Torres
Ana Carolina Cardoso Santos Durão
Ana Lucia Borges Shimada
Francine Maria Almeida
Cristina Bichels Hebeda
Fernanda Degobbi Tenorio Quirino Santos Lopes
Marisa Dolhnikoff
Milton Arruda Martins

Keywords

Abstract

Anacardic acids from cashew nut shell liquid, a Brazilian natural substance, have antimicrobial and antioxidant activities and modulate immune responses and angiogenesis. As inflammatory lung diseases have been correlated to environmental pollutants exposure and no reports addressing the effects of dietary supplementation with anacardic acids on lung inflammation in vivo have been evidenced, we investigated the effects of supplementation with anacardic acids in a model of diesel exhaust particle- (DEP-) induced lung inflammation. BALB/c mice received an intranasal instillation of 50 μ g of DEP for 20 days. Ten days prior to DEP instillation, animals were pretreated orally with 50, 150, or 250 mg/kg of anacardic acids or vehicle (100 μ L of cashew nut oil) for 30 days. The biomarkers of inflammatory and antioxidant responses in the alveolar parenchyma, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF), and pulmonary vessels were investigated. All doses of anacardic acids ameliorated antioxidant enzyme activities and decreased vascular adhesion molecule in vessels. Animals that received 50 mg/kg of anacardic acids showed decreased levels of neutrophils and tumor necrosis factor in the lungs and BALF, respectively. In summary, we demonstrated that AAs supplementation has a potential protective role on oxidative and inflammatory mechanisms in the lungs.

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