Abstract

Purpose : To investigate the effect of the oral administration of evening primrose oil on the radiation response and the blood flow of normal tissue and a tumour in BALB/c mice. Methods and materials : Aliquots of evening primrose oil were fed to BALB/c mice daily and the radiation response of the skin was assessed by the determination of ED 50 values for the incidence of moist desquamation, using probit analysis. Tumour radiosensitivity was investigated by determining the growth delay caused by irradiation of a transplantable rhabdomyosarcoma. The 86 RbCl uptake technique was used to determine the blood flow in normal foot and tumour tissue. The fatty-acid content of red blood cells, plasma and tumour tissue was measured using gas chromatography. Results : Daily evening primrose oil dietary supplementation reduced the sensitivity of skin to radiation-induced moist desquamation and prevented the radiation-associated increase in blood flow that was observed in this tissue. No modification of tumour blood flow or of tumour sensitivity to radiation resulted from evening primrose oil supplementation of mice. Evening primrose oil supplementation resulted in changes in plasma levels of linoleic acid (LA), gamma-linolenic acid (GLA), dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (DGLA) and arachidonic acid (AA). These changes were contingent on whether the mice had been irradiated or not. In red blood cells evening primrose oil supplementation increased the GLA level of unirradiated mice and the LA level at 20 days after irradiation. There were no changes in tumour fatty-acid levels as a result of evening primrose oil treatment. Conclusions : Daily evening primrose oil supplementation reduced the sensitivity of skin to radiation-induced moist desquamation but did not alter tumour sensitivity to radiation.

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