Dissertação
Estudo da peroxidação lipídica in vivo e in vitro em ratos infectados experimentalmente com Trypanosoma evansi
Fecha
2009-03-02Registro en:
WOLKMER, Patricia. Study of lipid peroxidation in vivo and in vitro in rats experimentally infected with Trypanosoma evansi. 2009. 48 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Medicina Veterinária) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2009.
Autor
Wolkmer, Patricia
Institución
Resumen
The present study aimed to assess the lipid peroxidation and the susceptibility of
erythrocytes in vitro peroxidation as indicators of oxidative damage in erythrocytes and its
role to the pathogenesis of anemia during the early acute phase of Trypanosoma evansi
infection in rats. Fifty male Wistar rats were randomly allotted into seven groups: three
trypanosome-infected groups (T2, T4 and T6; n = 10 animals per group) and four uninfected
controls (C0, C2, C4 and C6; n = 5 animals per group). Animals from trypanosome-infected
groups were intraperitoneally injected with 106 trypanosomes. Blood sample was collected by
cardiac puncture before infection (day 0; Group C0) or on the 2nd (C2 and T2), 4th (C4 and T4)
and 6th (C6 and T6) day pos-infection (dpi). The number that follows the group name is
referring to the day of the cardiac blood collection. The samples were analyzed for red blood
cell count (RBC), hemoglobin (Hb) concentration, packed cell volume (PCV), plasma
malondialdehyde (MDA) and in vitro peroxidation of erythrocytes. The mean values of the
hematological indices gradually decreased in infected compared with the control rats. MDA
was significantly increased (P < 0.001) on 6th dpi in infected versus controls and was
negatively correlated with PCV (P < 0.001; R² = 0.372). The erythrocytes in vitro peroxidation
values were higher in group T4 and T6 than control rats (P < 0.01). There was positively
correlation with erythrocytes peroxidation (P < 0.001; R² = 0.414) and MDA. The results of
this study indicate that T. evansi infection in rats is associated with oxidative stress, indicated
by lipid peroxidation, and oxidative damage in erythrocytes membrane, as demonstrated by
in vitro peroxidation. This may be one of the causes of anemia in acute trypanosomosis.