Acute edematous pancreatitis was induced in conscious rats by intravenous infusion of cerulein at a supramaximal dose of 7.5 μg/kg/h during 6 h. The most important finding of our study was a marked decrease in the protein and non-protein content of sulfhydryl groups parallel to an evident elevation in the malondialdehyde concentration in pancreatic tissue. The presented data suggest that in cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats, oxygen radicals mediate increased peroxidation reactions which are accompanied by depletion of nonenzymatic sulfhydryl-containing free radical scavengers. The above phenomenon contributes to a disturbance in thiol metabolism resulting in serious diminution of pancreatic protein sulfhydryl compounds.
Varicose saphenous vein segments, segments of those veins with thrombophlebitis, and segments of normal veins obtained during operation on 23 patients were studied to define the pattern of pro-oxidative and antioxidative systems in these tissues. In segments of varicose veins (VV) the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) was significantly decreased as compared with normal veins: 7.8 ±2.9 vs 13.5 ±4.3 U/mg of protein (P < 0.05), but it was almost unchanged in the segments of W with thrombophlebitis. The activity of glutathione reductase (GSH-R) in all studied segments was similar and amounted to about 12.0 IU. The content of free sulfhydryl (SH) groups, the concentration of ascorbic acid, and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances (TBA-RS) in segments of VV were significantly decreased by 40%, 48%, and 47%, respectively (P < 0.05) as compared with segments of normal veins. The values of ascorbic acid and TBA-RS in the segments of W with thrombophlebitis were increased by 13% and 16%, respectively, as compared with segments of normal veins. Decreased activities of SOD and reduced levels of free SH-groups and of ascorbic acid concentration in W may indicate impaired antioxidant mechanisms in this tissue.
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