AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how different types of dietary fats and the carcinogen NDMA affect lipid peroxidation in rats.
  • Increased dietary fats led to more ethane being exhaled, indicating higher lipid peroxidation, particularly at the 12.5% fat level.
  • Rats on polyunsaturated fat diets exhaled more ethane than those on saturated fats, and NDMA significantly heightened ethane levels, while the drug indomethacin completely blocked this increase.

Article Abstract

The effect of dietary lipids alone or in combination with an administered carcinogen, N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), on whole body lipid peroxidation was studied in rats in vivo. Groups of rats were fed diets containing 2%, 12.5%, or 25% of either saturated or polyunsaturated fat. Lipid peroxidation in individual animals was determined by measuring the concentration of ethane in exhaled air. Increased ethane exhalation was found in rats when the amount of dietary fat was increased from 2% to 12.5%, but animals receiving 12.5% or 25% fat in the diet exhaled ethane at similar rates. Rats consuming polyunsaturated fat exhaled more ethane than those eating saturated fat. In all groups, NDMA administration drastically increased ethane exhalation. Indomethacin completely blocked the increase in ethane exhalation caused by dietary lipids.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/019262338701500113DOI Listing

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