| Literature DB >> 31963166 |
Segewkal H Heruye1, Leonce N Maffofou Nkenyi2, Neetu U Singh2, Dariush Yalzadeh3, Kalu K Ngele4, Ya-Fatou Njie-Mbye5, Sunny E Ohia5, Catherine A Opere2.
Abstract
Cataracts, one of the leading causes of preventable blindness worldwide, refers to lens degradation that is characterized by clouding, with consequent blurry vision. As life expectancies improve, the number of people affected with cataracts is predicted to increase worldwide, especially in low-income nations with limited access to surgery. Although cataract surgery is considered safe, it is associated with some complications such as retinal detachment, warranting a search for cheap, pharmacological alternatives to the management of this ocular disease. The lens is richly endowed with a complex system of non-enzymatic and enzymatic antioxidants which scavenge reactive oxygen species to preserve lens proteins. Depletion and/or failure in this primary antioxidant defense system contributes to the damage observed in lenticular molecules and their repair mechanisms, ultimately causing cataracts. Several attempts have been made to counteract experimentally induced cataract using in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo techniques. The majority of the anti-cataract compounds tested, including plant extracts and naturally-occurring compounds, lies in their antioxidant and/or free radical scavenging and/or anti-inflammatory propensity. In addition to providing an overview of the pathophysiology of cataracts, this review focuses on the role of various categories of natural and synthetic compounds on experimentally-induced cataracts.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; cataracts; glutathione; lens; lens crystallins; lens opacification; lens transparency; superoxide dismutase
Year: 2020 PMID: 31963166 PMCID: PMC7168925 DOI: 10.3390/ph13010015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Type of cataract and their respective causes and risks [10].
| Type of Cataracts | Causes | Vulnerable Population |
|---|---|---|
|
| Heredity, gestational maldevelopment of lens, maternal malnutrition, infection, drugs, radiation, fetal/infantile factors-anoxia, metabolic disorders, birth trauma, malnutrition, congenital anomalies, idiopathic | It may occur since birth or from infancy to adolescence |
|
| Senescent changes, dehydration, systemic diseases, smoking, oxidative stress, and lack of essential dietary elements | Elderly persons, mostly those over the age of 50 years |
|
| Some physical damage to the eye lens capsule, penetration of foreign object | People working in hazardous conditions such as welders and those in glass furnaces |
|
| Complications of some chronic inflammatory and degenerative eye diseases | Patients of skin diseases, allergy, uveitis, glaucoma, diabetes, emphysema, asthma |
|
| Metabolic disorders—diabetes mellitus, galactosemia | Persons deficient in certain enzymes and hormones |
|
| Certain toxicants and drugs- Steroids, NSAID’s | People on steroid therapy and toxic drugs |
|
| Infra-red rays, x-rays, ultra-violet rays, and powerful electric current | Persons who encounter excess sunlight, artificial radiations, high voltage |
Used with permission from Gupta VB (2017) [10].
Figure 1Characteristics of lens structures and major types of cataracts for location-based classification. (A) A schematic view of lens structures and corresponding types of cataracts. Slit lamp biomicroscopy photos showing (B) nuclear cataract, (C) cortical cataract, and (D) subcapsular posterior cataract. Copyright Elsevier (used with permission from Elsevier) [11].
Figure 2Scene viewed by normal vision (A) and a person with cataracts (B); sourced from NEI Media Library [13].
Figure 3Schematic presentation of the cross-sectional view of mammalian lens. Used with permission from Roberts J [39].
Crystallins identified in human lens [17].
| Protein | Size (Da) | Residues | ΔG (kJ/mol) | Gene | Chromosomal Location |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 19 909 | 173 | 27 |
| 21q22.3 |
|
| 20 159 | 175 | 21 |
| 11q23.1 |
|
| 23 191 | 198 | – |
| 17q11.2 |
|
| 21 964 | 196 | – |
| 2q35 |
|
| 25 150 | 215 | 58 |
| 17q11.2 |
|
| 22 243 | 195 | – |
| 22q12.1 |
|
| 27 892 | 251 | 67 |
| 22q12.1 |
|
| 23 249 | 204 | 49 |
| 22q11.23 |
|
| 24 230 | 211 | – |
| 22q11.23 |
|
| 20 747 | 173 | 36 |
| 2q33.3 |
|
| 20 607 | 173 | 69.4 |
| 2q33.3 |
|
| 20 875 | 177 | 43.9 |
| 3q27.3 |
Daltons (Da); Gibbs free energy (ΔG [kJ/mol]). Copyright Elsevier (used with permission from Elsevier).
Summary of in vitro and ex vivo studies of cataractogenesis.
| Class | Drugs Tested | Cataract Stimuli | Tissue | Pharmacological Action | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| GSH | H2O2 (10 mM) | Goat lenses | Increased lenticular antioxidant defense enzymes and decreased malondialdehyde levels | [ |
| Ascorbic acid and GSH | Incubation in riboflavin and exposure to sunlight | Bovine lens soluble proteins | Reduced structural crosslinking and proteolytic instability of lens crystallins | [ | |
| Alpha-tocopherol, lutein and zeaxanthin | H2O2 (100 µM) | Human lens epithelial cells | Alpha-tocopherol, lutein and zeaxanthin protected lens protein, lipid, and DNA from oxidative damage. Unlike α-tocopherol, lutein and zeaxanthin did not mitigate GSH depletion. | [ | |
| Vitamin C or vitamin E | Buthionine sulfoximine (25–200 µM) treatment followed by H2O2 (0–800 µM) | Rabbit lens epithelial cells | Pretreatment with vitamin C (25–50 µM) or vitamin E (5–40 µM), restored the resistance of GSH-depleted cells to H2O2 upholding GSH in its reduced form. | [ | |
| Alpha- tocopherol | Glucose (55 mM) | Goat lenses | Increased water-soluble protein content and Na+-K+-ATPase activity while reducing malondialdehyde levels. | [ | |
| Aminothiol WR-1065 and anetholedithiolethione (20 µM) | X-ray irradiation (10 Gy at rate of 2 Gy/min) | Bovine lens epithelial cells | Increased GSH levels and cell viability accompanied by decreased HO fluorescence and lower proportion of cells with apoptotic morphology. | [ | |
| Alpha lipoic acid | H2O2 (0.2 mM) | Adult Sprague-Dawley rat lenses | Inhibited lens’ epithelial cell apoptosis and activated lenticular anti-oxidative enzymes. | [ | |
|
| Pyruvate, alpha ketoglutarate, oxaloacetate | H2O2 (10 mM) | Goat lenses | Pyruvate (10 mM), alpha ketoglutarate (20 mM) and oxaloacetate (20 mM) decreased lenticular malondialdehyde while augmenting GSH-Px activity. | [ |
| Pyruvate | H2O2 (10 mM) | Goat lenses | Increased lenticular antioxidant defense enzymes and decreased malondialdehyde levels | [ | |
| Pyruvate | H2O2 (2 mM) | Sprague-Dawley rat lenses | Decreased water insoluble proteins (urea soluble) level and prevented loss of gamma crystallin fraction. | [ | |
| Ketoacids and amino acids | H2O2 (1 mM) | Goat lens | All amino acids (1 mM) protected against GSH depletion except | [ | |
| Exposure to hyperoxia- | Rabbit lenses | Increased GSH and water-soluble protein content. However, it lowered Na+, K+-ATPase, and CAT activity. | [ | ||
| Dexamethasone (5 µM) | Sprague-Dawley rat lenses | Elevated GSH/GSSG ratio and limiting lipid peroxidation | [ | ||
| Acetyl- | Sodium Selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Augmented CAT and GSH-Px activity while reducing malondialdehyde levels. | [ | |
| Propolis | Glucose (55 mM) | Rat lens epithelial cells | Propolis (5 and 50 μg/mL) attenuated both the glucose (55 mM)-induced elevation in the expression of reactive oxygen species and elevation in cell viability | [ | |
|
| Quercetin | Glucose (55 mM) | Goat lenses | Increased water-soluble protein content and Na+-K+-ATPase activity while reducing malondialdehyde levels. | [ |
| Chrysin, a flavonoid present in honey | Sodium selenite (100 µM/mL) | Wistar rat lenses | Chrysin (200 µM/mL) prevented cataractogenesis. Increased activity of calpain and lenticular preferred calpain (Lp82), as well as mRNA transcript levels of genes that encode m-calpain and Lp82. Lowered calcium transporter proteins and lenticular apoptotic-cascade proteins along with mRNA transcripts of the genes. | [ | |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), a polyphenol derived from green tea | H2O2 | Human γ-crystallin | EGCG attenuated and reversed peroxide-induced aggregation of αA(66–80), a peptide fragment derived from αA-crystallin peptide | [ | |
| Green tea ( | Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Preserved SOD, GSH-Px, and CAT activities | [ | |
| Drevogenin D, a triterpenoid aglycone from | Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Rat lenses | Increased activity of SOD, CAT, GSH-Px, and GSH-Rx. It augmented the level of reduced GSH and protein sulfhydryl, while it reduced lipid peroxidation. | [ | |
| Aqueous extract of | Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Restored GSH and activities of SOD, GSH-Px and GST while decreasing malondialdehyde levels. | [ | |
| A herbal preparation—Triphala (composed of | Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Restored GSH content and activities of SOD, CAT, GSH-Px and GST while malondialdehyde levels were decreased. | [ | |
| Ethanol extract of Moringa oliefera | Glucose (55 mM) | Goat lenses | Extracts (200 µg/mL and 500 µg/mL) reduced malondialdehyde levels and increased lenticular CAT, GSH, total and soluble protein. | [ | |
| Hydro-ethanolic leaf extract of | Glucose (55 mM) | Goat lenses | Extract (500 µg/mL) reduced malondialdehyde level and increased total protein content and SOD activity. | [ | |
| Ethanol extract of | Glucose (55 mM) | Goat lenses | Extract (100, 300, and 500 ng/mL) increased protein (total and water-soluble proteins) content and Na+-K+-ATPase activity while reducing malondialdehyde levels. | [ | |
| Aqueous extract of Seabuckthorn ( | H2O2 (0.5 mM) | Goat lenses | Reinstated the level of SOD and GSH while reducing malondialdehyde levels | [ | |
| Aqueous leaf extract of | H2O2 | Goat lenses | Extracts (5, 10, 15, and 20 mg/mL) increased SOD, GSH, total protein content while lowering malondialdehyde levels proportionally with increase in concentration. | [ | |
| Fruit extract | H2O2 (0.5 mM) | Goat lenses | Increased SOD, GSH, and total protein content while lowering malondialdehyde content. | [ | |
|
| Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Increased SOD, GSH-Px, GST, and CAT. | [ |
Summary of in vivo studies of cataractogenesis.
| Drug | Cataract Stimuli | Animal Model | Mode of Application | Pharmacological Action | Ref | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Vitamin C (Ascorbic acid) | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/kg) | White New Zealand rabbits | Subcutaneous injection | Decreased cataractogenesis by 40% | [ |
| Sodium selenite, 100 µL of 20 μmol/kg | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Subcutaneous 0.1 mL of vitamin C (0.3 mM) injection on 8th day postpartum increased concentration of total protein and soluble protein. Comparable electrophoretic pattern of lens proteins to untreated. | [ | ||
| 10% dietary galactose | Guinea pigs | Dietary | Intensified the loss of Na+-K+ ATPase activity in the lens capsule-epithelium caused by galactose feeding. Oxidized GSH was not detectable in the lens capsule epithelia. Hexose monophosphate shunt activity was not elevated in lenses of pigs during the first hour of culture after euthanasia | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite (20 μmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Dietary | Ascorbic acid attenuated onset of cataract and loss in chaperone activity. | [ | ||
| Vitamin E | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Vitamin E attenuated selenite-induced onset of cataract and the corresponding loss in chaperone activity. | [ | |
| Prednisolone acetate | Brown–Norway rats | Eye drops | Vitamin E attenuated steroid-induced cataract formation probably due to its antioxidant effect and on the stability of the lens fiber membrane. | [ | ||
| Ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation | Albino Sprague–Dawley rats | Dietary | Vitamin E attenuated intensity UVB-induced opacity and enhanced lenticular GSH content. | [ | ||
| Streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) | Wistar rats | Dietary | Vitamin E delayed onset of advanced cataracts | [ | ||
| Vitamin E- and selenium | SDZ ICT 322 (selective 5-HT3 antagonist) | Wistar rats | Dietary | Deficiency of vitamin E and selenium accelerated onset of cataracts and enhanced lipid peroxidation | [ | |
| Alpha-lipoic acid | Fructose | Sprague–Dawley albino rats | Gavage | Retarded onset and progression of cataract. Increased CAT, SOD, GSH-Px, GSH and total protein. It also increased activity of Ca2+ ATPase activity while it reduced malondialdehyde and Ca2+. | [ | |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Increased lenticular GSH, ascorbate, and vitamin E. | [ | |||
| Stobadine | Streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) | Wistar rats | Dietary | Reduced plasma malondialdehyde and replenished lenticular Sulfhydryl groups. | [ | |
| Melatonin (4 mg/Kg) | Buthionine sulfoximine (3 mmol/kg) | New born rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Inhibited cataract formation in rats evidenced with increased total GSH possibly due to its free radical property or stimulated GSH production. | [ | |
|
| Zinc sulfate | Sodium selenite | Rabbits | Eye drops | Retard opacities progression and lowered opacity score. | [ |
| Ebselen | Sodium selenite (30 nmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rat s | Subcutaneous injection | Increased GSH levels while it lowered malondialdehyde levels and total nitrite level. | [ | |
|
| Sodium pyruvate | streptozotocin (55 mg/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Dietary | Decreased levels of glycated proteins, sorbitol, malondialdehyde while it increased activity of the cation pump. | [ |
| Pyruvate | Sodium selenite (0.5 µmoles) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Intraperitoneal injection | It prevented cataractogenesis and its level was increased in the aqueous humor. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite, 100 µL of 20 μmol/kg | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Subcutaneous 0.1 mL of | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite subcutaneously (30 nmol/g). | Sprague–Dawley rat | Intraperitoneal injection | Reduced cataract formation by 71.4%. Increased lenticular and serum GSH while reducing lenticular protein carbonyl and lenticular and serum malondialdehyde level. | [ | ||
| Triamcinolone acetonide (1 mg) | Wistar–Albino rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Increased lenticular GSH and GSH-Px while it reduced the level of protein carbonyl and malondialdehyde. | [ | ||
| Streptozotocin (65 mg/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Eye drops | Inhibited cataract progression at an early after which activity declined. Did not increase GSH-Px and CAT. Increased glycation levels and thiols. | [ | ||
| l-buthionine-(S,R)-sulfoximine | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Replenished GSH levels of replenished and limited protein carbonylation, lipid peroxidation, and redox system components. | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Reversed cataract grade. Increased GSH level, thioltransferase activity, m-calpain activity, and m-calpain levels while it reduced malondialdehyde level, GSH-Px enzyme activity, and calcium levels | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite | Wistar rats | Eye drops | Reversed cataract grade. Increased GSH level, thioltransferase activity, m-calpain activity, and m-calpain levels while it reduced malondialdehyde level, GSH-Px enzyme activity, and calcium levels | [ | ||
| Acetyl- | Sodium selenite | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Increased GSH content as well as GST and GSH-Px activity while it lowered malondialdehyde level. It also increased staining intensity of isozyme bands for SOD and GSH-Px. | [ | |
|
| water-insoluble antioxidants (lutein, zeaxanthin hesperetin, quercetin, anthocyanin, β-carotene, and α-tocopherol) and water-soluble antioxidants (ascorbic acid, cyanidin) | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/Kg) | Sprague Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Maintained activity of chaperone activity in water soluble lens proteins. | [ |
| Rutin | Sodium selenite (19 µmol/kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Inhibited lipid peroxidation and increased activity of SOD, CAT, GSH-Px, and, GST. | [ | |
| Hesperetin (flavonoid) | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/Kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Increased expression of the of filensin (94 and 50 kDa forms). Interestingly, these forms of filensin Increased lenticular GSH and ascorbic acid levels. | [ | |
| Hesperetin (flavonoid) and derivatives | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/Kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Mitigated decreased lens chaperone activity and α-crystallin water solubility. | [ | |
| Ellagic acid | Sodium selenite (19 µmol/kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Lenticular and erythrocytic GSH were increased while it reduced lenticular malondialdehyde and calcium content. | [ | |
| Green tea (Camellia sinensis) | Sodium selenite (0.25 µmol/Kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Decreased cataractogenesis by 66.67% | [ | |
|
| Sodium selenite (2.2 mg/kg) | Wistar rats | Subcutaneous injection | Scavenged reactive oxygen species and prevented oxidative cross-linking of proteins and single strand breakage of DNA. | [ | |
| Streptozotocin (65 mg/Kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Drinking water | Hypoglycemic effect retreaded cataract formation. | [ | ||
| Caffeine | Ultra-violate-B radiation | Sprague–Dawley rats | Eye drops | Reduced caspase-3 and lens sensitivity to ultra-violate-B by 1.23 times. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (15 µmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Gastric intubation | Reduced lenticular level of malondialdehyde, total nitric oxide, Ca+-ATPase, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β, SOD, while it increased lenticular total protein, reduced GSH, and CAT. | [ | ||
| Caffeine and pyrocatechol | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/Kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Maintained activity of chaperone activity in water soluble lens proteins. | [ | |
| β-carotene | Sodium selenite (20 μmol/Kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Maintained activity of chaperone activity in water soluble lens proteins. | [ | |
| Lycopene | Dietary 30% galactose | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Reduced selenite induced cataract by 89% and reduced onset and progression of galactose induced cataract was observed with oral feeding of lycopene. Only 35% of the eyes developed mature cataract as opposed to 100% in the control group | [ | |
| Dietary 30% galactose | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Reduced selenite induced cataract by 89% and reduced onset and progression of galactose induced cataract were observed with oral feeding of lycopene. Only 35% of the eyes developed mature cataract as opposed to 100% in the control group | [ | ||
| Curcumin | Galactose (30%) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Dietary | Augmented GSH while it reduced malondialdehyde levels. It also inhibited advanced glycation end product formation and protein aggregation. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (30 µM/Kg) | Wistar rats | Subcutaneous injection | Increased activity of SOD and CAT while it reduced malondialdehyde levels and xanthine oxidase activity. | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite (15 µM/Kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Reduced malondialdehyde levels while it increased SOD, GSH-Px, GST, and CAT activity. | [ | ||
| Streptozotocin (35 mg/Kg) | WNIN rats | Dietary | Reduced malondialdehyde levels, increased reduced GSH, protein carbonyl content and activities of peroxide dismutase, GSH-Px, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase | [ | ||
| Turmeric | Streptozotocin (35 mg/kg) | Wistar–NIN rats | Dietary | Reduced lipid peroxidation and protein carbonyl content while it increased GSH and antioxidant enzyme activities. | [ | |
| Resveratrol | Sodium selenite (30 nmol/g) | Spraque–Dawley rats | Subcutaneous injection | Increased lenticular and erythrocytic GSH and lowered malondialdehyde levels. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (15 µmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Oral | Preserved epithelial and lens fiber integrity, aquaporin 0, alpha A and B crystallins, total lens proteins, and lenticular GSH levels. It also showed free radicals scavenging activity and inhibited lipid peroxidation. | [ | ||
| Hydroalchoholic extract of | Sodium selenite (30 nmol/kg) | White rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Improved cataract grade and optical clarity of lenses. | [ | |
| H636 grape seed proanthocyanidin extract | Sodium selenite (30 nmol/g) | Spraque–Dawley rats | Oral | Increased lenticular GSH content and reduced malondialdehyde. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (4 μg/g) | Spraque–Dawley rats | Oral | Reduced oxidative stress index, prevented structural crystallin loss, and increased total peroxide level. | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite (20 µmole/Kg) | White rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Prevented oxidative attack and calpain activation, protein loss and aggregation. | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite (4 mg/kg) | Rat | Intraperitoneal injection | Increased GSH, activities of SOD and CAT while thiobarbituric acid reacting substances were reduced. | [ | ||
| Sodium selenite (4 mg/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Increase SOD, CAT, GSH, Ca2+ ATPase while it reduced, calcium, calpains and lipid peroxidation product-thiobarbituric acid reacting substances | [ | ||
| Lupeol, a flavonoid from the plant, | Sodium selenite (25 μg/g) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Oral | Reduced lipid peroxidation and protein oxidation. Upheld activity of. Lenticular SOD, CAT, GSH-Px, GSH-Rx, GST, and GSH content. | [ | |
| Methanolic extract of | Streptozotocin (34 mg/kg body weight) | Wistar rats | Forced gut- feeding | Delay in onset of cataracts; Restoration of lenticular GSH, GSH-Px and SOD activities | [ | |
| Aqueous extract of | Sodium selenite (30 nmol/g body weight) | Wistar albino rats | Eye drops | The allium aqueous extract of garlic preserved optical clarity; Allium-treated lenses exhibited higher total antioxidants and higher GSH-Px and SOD activities | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (18 μmol/kg) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Gastric intubation | Increased water-soluble protein and GSH content, SOD, GSH-Px, and CAT activity while it lowered water-insoluble protein, malondialdehyde, and Ca2+-ATPase. It inhibited | [ | ||
|
| Sodium selenite (25 µmole/kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Prevented lens protein insolubilization. | [ | |
| Sodium selenite (20 µmol/kg) | Wistar rats | Intraperitoneal injection | Increased activities of SOD, GSH-Px, CAT and GSH content. Halted lipid peroxidation, protein oxidation, and proteolysis and insolubilization of water-soluble proteins. | [ | ||
| Propolis | Sprague–Dawley albino rats | Oral (dietary) | Reduced reactive oxygen species and improved epithelial cell viability. | [ | ||
| An aqueous extract of | Alloxan 120 mg/Kg | Rats | Gastric tube | Showed antihyperglycemic effect and reduced opacity index. | [ | |
|
| Total-cranium irradiation (5 Gy) | Sprague–Dawley rats | Oral | Increase the activities of SOD and GSH-Px while it reduced and significantly decreased malonaldehyde content. | [ | |
| A herbal preparation-Triphala ( | Sodium selenite (100 µM) | Wistar rat lenses | Intraperitoneal injection | Delayed onset and progression of cataracts | [ |