Keeping antioxidants may spare gut.Some 1 million people in the United States suffer from inflammatory bowel disease inflammatory bowel disease n. Abbr. IBD Any of several incurable and debilitating diseases of the gastrointestinal tract characterized by inflammation and obstruction of parts of the intestine. . In the colon, this disease is called ulcerative colitis ulcerative colitis Inflammation of the colon, especially of its mucous membranes. The inflamed membranes develop patches of tiny ulcers, and the diarrhea contains blood and mucus. ; in the small intestine, it's Crohn's disease. Though physicians know little about what causes these conditions, each results in abdominal pain and debilitating de·bil·i·tat·ing adj. Causing a loss of strength or energy. Debilitating Weakening, or reducing the strength of. Mentioned in: Stress Reduction , bloody diarrhea. Now, researchers have uncovered evidence that the conditions may initially be triggered by chemical reactions that deplete de·plete v. 1. To use up something, such as a nutrient. 2. To empty something out, as the body of electrolytes. affected tissues of a key antioxidant antioxidant, substance that prevents or slows the breakdown of another substance by oxygen. Synthetic and natural antioxidants are used to slow the deterioration of gasoline and rubber, and such antioxidants as vitamin C (ascorbic acid), butylated hydroxytoluene . Matthew B. Grisham and Tak Yee Aw of Louisiana State University Health Science Center in Shreveport have been working with mice genetically engineered to spontaneously develop the disease. They recently noticed that 5 weeks before occurrence of the hallmark intestinal inflammation, concentrations of one antioxidant--reduced glutathione--begin falling in the animal's gut. By the time inflammation appeared, this antioxidant had dropped by 80 percent in affected gut tissue. To confirm the role of oxidative reactions in the gut, Grisham and Aw added a potent antioxidant, n-acetyl cysteine, to the sick animals' drinking water. In short order, glutathione glutathione: see coenzyme. concentrations rose to nearly normal levels and inflammation in the rodents' guts decreased significantly. Grisham notes that some genes respond to cellular oxidation by revving up the immune system, thereby triggering inflammation. He says his new findings hint that patients may one day be able to better tame the runaway inflammation of inflammatory bowel disease by using antioxidant therapies. |
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