You need JavaScript to view this

Potency of maternal folic acid supplementation on gamma irradiation- induced histological and embryological anomalies in albino rats

Abstract

Folic acid, a member of the water-soluble vitamin B group, is emerged as an important nutritional factor especially during the course of pregnancy. It is rapidly absorbed from the proximal part of small intestine, distributed to the body tissues, stored in the liver and actively concentrated in the cerebrospinal fluid. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potency of maternal folic acid supplementation in ameliorating the maternal and fetal detrimental impacts of gamma irradiation. Folic acid, at a dose level of 4 mg/Kg body weight was daily administered via an oral stomach tube to pregnant adult albino rats from the 1st to the 20 th day of pregnancy, while mothers were subjected to gamma irradiation at the dose of 3 Gy on day 10 of gestation during the sensitive period of organogenesis. Experimental investigations carried out 1 day prior to parturition have demonstrated that folic acid intake throughout the whole gestational period had significantly diminished the deleterious histopathological disorders in large intestine, liver and uterus of irradiated mothers. Concomitantly, folic acid has been able to enfeeble the hazardous teratological effects of radiation including mainly the fetal intrauterine lethality, developmental delay and prominent morphological deformities. Conclusively, folic acid was  More>>
Authors:
Rezk, R G; [1]  Ibrahim, M F [2] 
  1. Health Rad. Res., NCRRT, Cairo (Egypt)
  2. Rad. Biology Dept., NCRRT, Cairo (Egypt)
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 2006
Product Type:
Journal Article
Resource Relation:
Journal Name: Egyptian Journal of Radiation Sciences and Applications; Journal Volume: 19; Journal Issue: 2
Subject:
63 RADIATION, THERMAL, AND OTHER ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTANT EFFECTS ON LIVING ORGANISMS AND BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS; CEREBROSPINAL FLUID; EMBRYOS; FETUSES; FOLIC ACID; GAMMA RADIATION; LARGE INTESTINE; LIVER; ORAL CAVITY; PREGNANCY; RATS; SMALL INTESTINE; STOMACH; UTERUS; VITAMIN B GROUP
OSTI ID:
20764946
Country of Origin:
Egypt
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
Journal ID: ISSN 1110-0303; EJRAES; TRN: EG0600438071547
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
page(s) 389-413
Announcement Date:
Sep 25, 2006

Citation Formats

Rezk, R G, and Ibrahim, M F. Potency of maternal folic acid supplementation on gamma irradiation- induced histological and embryological anomalies in albino rats. Egypt: N. p., 2006. Web.
Rezk, R G, & Ibrahim, M F. Potency of maternal folic acid supplementation on gamma irradiation- induced histological and embryological anomalies in albino rats. Egypt.
Rezk, R G, and Ibrahim, M F. 2006. "Potency of maternal folic acid supplementation on gamma irradiation- induced histological and embryological anomalies in albino rats." Egypt.
@misc{etde_20764946,
title = {Potency of maternal folic acid supplementation on gamma irradiation- induced histological and embryological anomalies in albino rats}
author = {Rezk, R G, and Ibrahim, M F}
abstractNote = {Folic acid, a member of the water-soluble vitamin B group, is emerged as an important nutritional factor especially during the course of pregnancy. It is rapidly absorbed from the proximal part of small intestine, distributed to the body tissues, stored in the liver and actively concentrated in the cerebrospinal fluid. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potency of maternal folic acid supplementation in ameliorating the maternal and fetal detrimental impacts of gamma irradiation. Folic acid, at a dose level of 4 mg/Kg body weight was daily administered via an oral stomach tube to pregnant adult albino rats from the 1st to the 20 th day of pregnancy, while mothers were subjected to gamma irradiation at the dose of 3 Gy on day 10 of gestation during the sensitive period of organogenesis. Experimental investigations carried out 1 day prior to parturition have demonstrated that folic acid intake throughout the whole gestational period had significantly diminished the deleterious histopathological disorders in large intestine, liver and uterus of irradiated mothers. Concomitantly, folic acid has been able to enfeeble the hazardous teratological effects of radiation including mainly the fetal intrauterine lethality, developmental delay and prominent morphological deformities. Conclusively, folic acid was found to offer protection during pregnancy against radiation injury, thus was capable of modulating the histopathological impacts of the studied maternal body organs and suppressing the embryonic mortality rates and serious fetal malformations induced by radiation.}
journal = []
issue = {2}
volume = {19}
place = {Egypt}
year = {2006}
month = {Jul}
}