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Glycine supplementation reduces the severity of chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis in hamsters
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作者 Odara maria de Sousa Sá Nilza Nelly Fontana Lopes +3 位作者 maria Teresa Seixas Alves Rajesh V.Lalla maria Luiza Vilela Oliva eliana maria monteiro caran 《Natural Science》 2013年第9期972-978,共7页
Objective: Oral mucositis (OM) is a devastating toxicity associated with cytotoxic cancer therapy. The OM pathogenesis and the complex interactions occur in response to tissue insult. Application of this evolving mode... Objective: Oral mucositis (OM) is a devastating toxicity associated with cytotoxic cancer therapy. The OM pathogenesis and the complex interactions occur in response to tissue insult. Application of this evolving model has aided in the development of mechanistically based therapies for the prevention and treatment of mucositis. The present study was to assess the effects of glycine supplementation on chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis. Methods: In a hamster cheek pouch model of chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis, one group of 20 animals received systemic glycine supplementation for 7 days, while another similar control group did not. Clinical mucositis severity and neutrophil infiltrate (on histology) were assessed by blinded examiners. Free radical production was measured as malondialdehyde (MDA) levels. Results: As compared to control animals, glycine-treated animals demonstrated a highly significant reduction in clinical severity of oral mucositis, neutrophil infiltrate, and MDA levels (p < 0.001 for all). Conclusions: Glycine supplementation reduces the severity of chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis in an animal model. This effect is at least partly mediated through inhibition of the inflammatory response and reduced production of damaging free radicals. 展开更多
关键词 GLYCINE CHEMOTHERAPY Oral Mucositis NEUTROPHILS MALONDIALDEHYDE Inflammatory
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