Nutrición Hospitalaria 01245 / http://dx.doi.org/10.20960/nh.1245
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Trabajo Original

Biochemical and histological changes produced by sweeteners and cytarabine in the brain of young rats


Ernestina Hernández García, Norma Osnaya Brizuela, Armando Valenzuela Peraza, David Calderón Guzmán, Maribel Ortiz Herrera, Hugo Juarez Olguin, Gerardo Barragán Mejía, Daniel Santamaría Del Ángel, Alberto Rojas Ochoa

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Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of splenda and stevia on dopamine and 5-HIAA levels, and some biomarkers of oxidative stress in the presence of cytarabine.Methods: Forty-eight young male Wistar rats each with a weight of 80 g (four weeks of age), distributed in six groups of eight animals each, were treated as follows: group 1, control (NaCl 0.9% vehicle); group 2, cytarabine (0.6 g/kg); group 3, stevia (0.6 g/kg); group 4, cytarabine + stevia; group 5, splenda; and group 6, cytarabine + splenda. Cytarabine was given intravenously (IV) while stevia and splenda were administered orally for five days, using orogastric tube. At the end of treatment, the animals were sacrificed and glucose levels in blood were measured. The brains were dissected for histological analysis and homogenated to measure levels of dopamine, lipid peroxidation (TBARS), serotonin metabolite (5-HIAA), Na+, K+ ATPase activity, and glutathione (GSH), using validated methods.Results: Sweeteners increased the glucose in animals that received cytarabine. Dopamine increased in cortex and decreased in striatum of animals that received stevia alone and combined with cytarabine. 5-HIAA decreased in striatum and cerebellum/medulla oblongata of animals that received sweeteners and cytarabine alone or combined. GSH increased in animals that received sweeteners and decreased with cytarabine. Lipoperoxidation decreased in groups that received sweeteners and cytarabine. Histopathological changes revealed marked degeneration of neuronal cells in animals treated with cytarabine.Conclusion: These results show that sweeteners as stevia or splenda may lead to the onset of unfavorable changes in dopamine and 5-HIAA. Antioxidant effects may be involved. Besides, histological changes revealed marked lesions of neuronal cells in experimental animals treated with cytarabine.

Palabras Clave: Cytarabine, dopamine, oxidative stress, sweeteners.



Goswami, Umesh, Pusalavidyasagar, Snigdha (2020) Restless legs syndrome associated with use of stevia nonnutritive sweetener. Journal of Clinical Sleep Medicine
Namoju, Ramanachary, Chilaka, Naga Kavitha (2021) Alpha-lipoic acid ameliorates cytarabine-induced developmental anomalies in rat fetus. Human & Experimental Toxicology
Guzmán, David Calderón, Brizuela, Norma Osnaya, Herrera, Maribel Ortíz, Olguín, Hugo Juárez, Peraza, Armando Valenzuela, García, Ernestina Hernández, Jiménez, Francisca Trujillo, Mejía, Gerardo Barragán (2019) Cytarabine and Ferric Carboxymaltose (Fe+3) Increase Oxidative Damage and Alter Serotonergic Metabolism in Brain. CNS & Neurological Disorders - Drug Targets
Gomes, Marcelo Pedrosa, dos Santos, Mariana Perez, de Freitas, Patricia Lawane, Schafaschek, Ana Marta, de Barros, Emily Nentwing, Kitamura, Rafael Shinji Akiyama, Paulete, Volnei, Navarro-Silva, Mario Antônio (2022) The aquatic macrophyte Salvinia molesta mitigates herbicides (glyphosate and aminomethylphosphonic acid) effects to aquatic invertebrates. Environmental Science and Pollution Research
de-la-Cruz, Miriel, Millán-Aldaco, Diana, Soriano-Nava, Daniela Marcia, Drucker-Colín, René, Murillo-Rodríguez, Eric (2018) The artificial sweetener Splenda intake promotes changes in expression of c-Fos and NeuN in hypothalamus and hippocampus of rats. Brain Research

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