Hesperidin prevents androgen deficiency-induced bone loss in male mice.

Phytother Res

Department of Nutrition and Life Science, Kanagawa Institute of Technology, 1030 Shimoogino, Atsugi, Kanagawa, Japan; Department of Clinical Dietetics and Human Nutrition, Josai University, 1-1, Keyakidai, Sakado, Saitama, Japan.

Published: February 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on whether hesperidin can prevent bone loss in male mice that underwent orchidectomy (a procedure to remove the testes).
  • Male ddY mice were divided into different groups, including some that received hesperidin, α-glucosylhesperidin, or simvastatin after the procedure, and the impacts on bone health were analyzed.
  • Results indicated that hesperidin and the other treatments helped maintain bone density and structure in mice, showing a more significant protective effect compared to previous studies on female mice.

Article Abstract

The purpose of this study was to examine whether hesperidin inhibits bone loss in androgen-deficient male mice. Male ddY mice aged 7 weeks underwent either a sham operation or orchidectomy (ORX) and were divided into five groups: a sham-operated group fed a control diet (Sham) based on AIN-93G formulation with corn oil instead of soy bean oil, an ORX group fed the control diet (ORX), a group fed the control diet containing 0.5% hesperidin (ORX + H), a group fed the control diet containing 0.7% α-glucosylhesperidin (ORX + αG), and a group fed the control diet containing 0.013% simvastatin (ORX + St). Four weeks after intervention, ORX mice showed a striking decrease in seminal vesicle weight, which was not affected by the administration of hesperidin, α-glucosylhesperidin, or simvastatin. Femoral BMD was significantly reduced by ORX, and bone loss was inhibited by the administration of hesperidin, α-glucosylhesperidin or simvastatin. Histomorphometric analysis showed that the bone volume and trabecular thickness were significantly lower, and the osteoclast number was higher in the distal femoral cancellous bone in the ORX group than in the Sham group, and these were normalized in the ORX + H, ORX + αG and ORX + St groups. These results indicate that hesperidin inhibited bone resorption and hyperlipidemia, in ORX mice, and the preventive effect was stronger than that observed in ovariectomized mice in our previous study.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ptr.5001DOI Listing

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