General Research
Model: rat
Saturated hydrogen saline protects rats from acute lung injury induced by paraquat
Simplified Version Available
New Hope for Treating Lung Damage: The Power of Saturated Hydrogen Saline
Researchers found that saturated hydrogen saline can protect rats from acute lung injury caused by paraquat, a toxic pesticide. This breakthrough could lead to new treatments for lung damage in humans. The study's findings are promising for those who work with pesticides or live in polluted areas.
Read Simplified ArticleAbstract
Publish Year 2011 Country China Rank Positive Journal World Journal of Emergency Medicine Primary Topic Lung Secondary TopicEnvironmental Pollution Model Rat Tertiary TopicPesticide Toxicity (Paraquat) Vehicle Saline (Dissolved) pH Neutral Application Injection Comparison Complement
Background
Methods: Thirty PQ poisoned rats were randomly divided into a PQ intoxication group (intoxication group), a saturated hydrogen saline intervention group (intervention group), and a control group, with 10 rats in each group. The first two groups accepted an intragastric administration of PQ at a dose of 50 mg/kg for every single rat, and the control group was fed with a same volume of normal saline. Five mL/kg of saturated hydrogen saline was given to the intervention group three times a day by peritoneal injection for three days after intoxication. Arterial blood gas was detected on the third day. The rats were executed and their lungs were taken for measurement of wet dry weight ratio, homogenate malondialdehyde (MDA), and 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OhdG). Histological changes of the lungs were also observed.
Methods
Results: Compared with the control group, the intoxication group had more serious hypoxemia, greater wet/dry weight ratio, higher MDA level, higher expression of 8-OhdG and more severe lung damage (P<0.01 or P<0.05). However, after intervention with saturated hydrogen saline, poisoned animals turned to have lighter hypoxemia, smaller wet/dry weight ratio, lower MDA level, lower expression of 8-OhdG, and milder lung damage (P<0.01 or P<0.05). Conclusions: Saturated hydrogen saline is effective in preventing acute lung injury caused by PQ. Possibly, it can neutralize toxic oxygen radicals selectively and alleviate the oxidative stress injury induced by PQ.