Abstract

Adjuvant arthritis was induced in rats fed a diet deficient in or supplemented with vitamin E, and its severity was scored according to the macroscopic findings of their legs, tails, and ears. The average score so obtained was higher in the vitamin E-deficient diet group than in the group of rats supplemented with vitamin E. Whereas the A G ratio remained depressed in vitamin E-deficient rats, rats on a vitamin E-supplemented diet showed a fast recovery from A G -ratio depression. The serum levels of β-glucuronidase and acid phosphatase were elevated after administration of an adjuvant. The serum levels of these lysosomal enzymes showed a remarkable increase in rats fed a vitamin E-deficient diet, while the elevation in lysosomal enzyme levels in rats fed a vitamin E-supplemented diet was inhibited. The levels of thiobarbituric acid (TBA) reactants in the synovia were elevated at 2 weeks after exposure to the adjuvant and were decreased thereafter. In rats maintained on a diet supplemented with vitamin E, on the other hand, the increase in synovial level of TBA reactive substances was inhibited. These observations suggest that the aggravation of adjuvant arthritis may be associated with lipid peroxidation and that antioxidants, such as vitamin E, may be beneficial for arthritis.

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