Reduction of Kidney Damage by Supplementation of Vitamins C and E in Rats With Deoxycorticosterone-Salt-Induced Hypertension

Authors

  • Behjat Seifi Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author
  • Mehri Kadkhodaee Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author
  • Seyed Morteza Karimian Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author
  • Maryam Zahmatkesh Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author
  • Sedighe Shams Children Medical Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author
  • Enayatolla Bakhshi Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran Author

Abstract

Introduction. We assessed whether cosupplementation of vitamins C and E has additive beneficial effects on reducing the kidney damage and attenuation of the arterial pressure elevation compared to administration of either vitamin C or vitamin E alone in deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt-induced hypertension.

Materials and Methods. Forty rats were divided into 4 study groups and 1 sham-operated group. Unilateral nephrectomy was carried out in the study groups and hypertension was induced by deoxycorticosterone injection and 1% sodium chloride and 0.2% potassium chloride added to the drinking water. Vitamins C and E (200 mg/kg/day) or combination of them were administered with DOCA-salt for 4 weeks in 3 study groups. The effects of DOCA and salt and treatment with vitamins were compared in terms of blood pressure, urinary protein excretion, antioxidant activity of the kidneys, and renal histological changes.

Results. Four weeks of supplementations of vitamins C, vitamin E, and both in the DOCA-salt-treated rats had comparable significant effects in decreasing systolic blood pressure. Urinary protein excretion and histological damage did not significantly change with the combination therapy of vitamins C and E compared to the vitamin C or E alone. The renal levels of glutathione and ferric reducing/antioxidant power in combination therapy group were similar to the two other treatment groups and were significantly higher than non-treated group.

Conclusions. Co-administration of vitamin C and E does not have an additive beneficial effect on reducing the kidney damage and hypertension compared to either vitamin C or E alone in DOCA-salt-induced hypertension.

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Published

2009-10-12

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL | Kidney Diseases

How to Cite

Reduction of Kidney Damage by Supplementation of Vitamins C and E in Rats With Deoxycorticosterone-Salt-Induced Hypertension. (2009). Iranian Journal of Kidney Diseases, 3(4), 197-202. https://ijkd.org/index.php/ijkd/article/view/65