Dutch
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Hearing Research 1995-Jun

Glutathione protection against gentamicin ototoxicity depends on nutritional status.

Alleen geregistreerde gebruikers kunnen artikelen vertalen
Log in Schrijf in
De link wordt op het klembord opgeslagen
J Lautermann
J McLaren
J Schacht

Sleutelwoorden

Abstract

This study demonstrates that gentamicin ototoxicity depends on dietary factors and correlates with tissue glutathione levels. After 15 days of gentamicin injections (100 mg/kg/day s.c.) guinea pigs on a regular protein diet (18.5% protein) had an average hearing loss of 9 dB at 3 kHz, 31 dB at 8 kHz and 42 dB at 18 kHz. Guinea pigs on a 7% protein diet showed an increased hearing loss of 52 dB at 3 kHz, 63 dB at 8 kHz and 74 dB at 18 kHz. Supplementing the low protein diet with either essential or sulfur-containing amino acids did not protect against gentamicin ototoxicity. Glutathione levels in the cochlear sensory epithelium were decreased in animals on a low protein diet and could be restored to normal by oral administration of glutathione monoethyl ester (1.2 g/kg/day) in combination with vitamin C (100 mg/kg/day). Glutathione supplementation significantly reduced the magnitude of hearing loss in the low protein diet group at all frequencies (43 dB reduction at 3 kHz, 27 dB reduction at 8 kHz and 21 dB reduction at 18 kHz). In animals on a full protein diet, dietary glutathione neither increased cochlear glutathione levels nor attenuated hearing loss. Serum gentamicin levels did not differ between animals on the various diets with or without glutathione supplement. These results suggest that gentamicin toxicity and detoxifying mechanisms are affected by the metabolic state of the animal and the glutathione content of the tissue. Thus, compounds that could potentially protect against gentamicin ototoxicity may be more correctly assessed in animal models of deficient nutritional states in which endogenous detoxifying mechanisms are compromised. This animal model might also be more realistically related to the clinical situation of a critically ill patient receiving gentamicin treatment.

Word lid van onze
facebookpagina

De meest complete database met geneeskrachtige kruiden, ondersteund door de wetenschap

  • Werkt in 55 talen
  • Kruidengeneesmiddelen gesteund door de wetenschap
  • Kruidenherkenning door beeld
  • Interactieve GPS-kaart - tag kruiden op locatie (binnenkort beschikbaar)
  • Lees wetenschappelijke publicaties met betrekking tot uw zoekopdracht
  • Zoek medicinale kruiden op hun effecten
  • Organiseer uw interesses en blijf op de hoogte van nieuwsonderzoek, klinische onderzoeken en patenten

Typ een symptoom of een ziekte en lees over kruiden die kunnen helpen, typ een kruid en zie ziekten en symptomen waartegen het wordt gebruikt.
* Alle informatie is gebaseerd op gepubliceerd wetenschappelijk onderzoek

Google Play badgeApp Store badge