1. Blood Oxidative Stress Modulates Alveolar Bone Loss in Chronically Stressed Rats.
- Author
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Lopes Castro MM, Nascimento PC, Souza-Monteiro D, Santos SM, Arouck MB, Garcia VB, Araújo RF Jr, de Araujo AA, Balbinot GS, Collares FM, Rosing CK, Monteiro MC, Ferraz Maia CS, and Lima RR
- Subjects
- Alveolar Bone Loss blood, Alveolar Bone Loss complications, Animals, Glutathione blood, Male, Rats, Rats, Wistar, Stress, Psychological complications, Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances analysis, Alveolar Bone Loss pathology, Oxidative Stress, Stress, Psychological blood
- Abstract
We aimed to investigate the effects of chronic stress (CS) on experimental periodontitis (EP) in rats. For this, 28 Wistar rats were divided into four groups: control, ligature-induced experimental periodontitis (EP), chronic stress (CS; by physical restraint model) and CS+EP (association of chronic stress and ligature-induced periodontitis). The experimental period lasted 30 days, including exposure to CS every day and ligature was performed on the 15th experimental day. After 30 days, the animals were submitted to the behavioral test of the elevated plus maze (EPM). Next, rats were euthanized for blood and mandible collection in order to evaluate the oxidative biochemistry (by nitric oxide (NO), reduced-glutathione activity (GSH), and thiobarbituric acid reactive substance levels (TBARS)) and alveolar bone characterization (by morphometric, micro-CT, and immunohistochemistry), respectively. The behavioral parameters evaluated in EPM indicated higher anxiogenic activity in the CS and CS+EP, groups, which is a behavioral reflex of CS. The results showed that CS was able to change the blood oxidative biochemistry in CS and CS+EP groups, decrease GSH activity in the blood, and increase the NO and TBARS concentrations. Thus, CS induces oxidative blood imbalance, which can potentialize or generate morphological, structural, and metabolic damages to the alveolar bone.
- Published
- 2020
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