| Literature DB >> 24918093 |
Hasan Imam1, Arfia Chowdhury1, Nasir Uddin Mahbub1, Amir Hossain2, Mohammed Faisal Bin Karim1, Mohammad Burhan Uddin1, Md Moklesur Rahman Sarker3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Present study describe the in vitro model of plasma oxidation of patients with different lipid profile, that can be correlated to their invivo plasma oxidizability in order to find the arterial diseases prone patient groups.Entities:
Keywords: Conjugated diene; Plasma oxidation; TBARS; Type II Diabetes
Year: 2014 PMID: 24918093 PMCID: PMC4031925 DOI: 10.1186/2251-6581-13-54
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Diabetes Metab Disord ISSN: 2251-6581
Figure 1Comparative oxidation of unfractionated plasma by incubating in two different conditions at 37°C, here SSWB means Sono Swiss water bath with ultrasonic wave exposure, and NWB means normal water bath. Bars are presented; mean (absorbance) ± SD. Difference in oxidation of plasma between presence and absence of Cu2+ in ultrasonic bath was significant.
Figure 2Plasma oxidizability with different plasma profile. (A) Plasma oxidizability in terms of total cholesterol level. (B) Plasma oxidizability in terms of different LDL concentration, which was significantly higher in plasma with highest LDL level than intermediate level (p = 0.0068) and lower level (p = 0.007). (C) Plasma oxidizability of different samples with different HDL level. Oxidizability is shown by mean (percent of basal) ± SD.
Plasma oxidative susceptibility in different traits
| Male | 21 | 42.405 ± 21.53 | 0.0544 ± 0.002 | 1.071 (in male than females, p = 0.432) | 0.5072 to 2.264 | |
| Female | 24 | 43.137 ± 26.95 | 0.059 ± 0.005 | |||
| Younger (age below 40 years) | 23 | 29.375 ± 20.13 | 0.0545 ± 0.0032 | 1.096 (in older than younger, p = 0.39) | 0.5607 to 2.141 | |
| Older (above 40 years) | 22 | 54.336 ± 22.25 | 0.0575 ± 0.004 | |||
| No | 30 | 28.375 ± 19.56 | 0.0565 ± 0.0032 | 1.091(in non-diabetes than diabetes, p = 0.39) | 0.6153 to 1.934 | |
| Yes | 15 | 38.607 ± 18.61 | 0.0573 ± 0.0053 |
Figure 3Box plot of lag-time in conjugated diene assay. The boxplot shows variable range of Lag time in conjugated diene assay, median values were 86.00, 82.00, 72.00 and 62.00 for healthy, patient group with less than 35mg/dL HDL, greater than 150 mg/dL cholesterol and ≥100 mg/dL LDL level, with average values 94.71, 88.72, 71.25 and 65.27 respectively.