Four indices of free radical activity were measured in fasting serum/plasma samples from 14 consecutive blacks with clinically quiescent chronic pancreatitis and 15 outwardly healthy hospital personnel at Soweto, the township near Johannesburg in South Africa. The patients had higher serum levels than did controls of lipid isomerisation (P < 0.002) and peroxidation (P < 0.05) markers, with lower plasma levels of glutathione (P < 0.0001) and bioactive fraction of vitamin C (P < 0.002). Lipid peroxide and non-bioavailable vitamin C concentrations in Sowetan patients were significantly higher than in their counterparts from Manchester, UK (P < 0.0001, P < 0.0005, respectively). These differences mirrored those in controls in that outwardly healthy Sowetans had much higher serum lipid peroxide levels than Manchester controls (P < 0.001) and much lower plasma concentration of vitamin C (P < 0.001) and hence of the bioavailable fraction ascorbate (P < 0.0002). Heightened free radical activity is thus a common denominator in chronic pancreatitis irrespective of geography, or putative aetiological factors whether alcoholism or idiopathic, since that ratio was approximately 95:5 at Johannesburg and 50:50 at Manchester. The further finding of subclinical oxidative stress in Sowetan controls and the endemic nature of chronic pancreatitis in that area supports the hypothesis that oxidative stress may be involved in its pathogenesis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0009-8981(94)90271-2 | DOI Listing |
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