PurposeIn our work, furan, lycopene, and furan + lycopene treatments were applied to non-diabetic and diabetic female rats via gavage.MethodsOvarian tissue alterations with histopathology, immunohistochemistry, malondialdehyde levels, oxidative stress parameters such as… Click to show full abstract
PurposeIn our work, furan, lycopene, and furan + lycopene treatments were applied to non-diabetic and diabetic female rats via gavage.MethodsOvarian tissue alterations with histopathology, immunohistochemistry, malondialdehyde levels, oxidative stress parameters such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione-S-transferase and harmful effect on ovarian tissue DNA were evaluated in all groups for 28 days.ResultsFuran caused the changes histological, ovarian cell’s DNA structure, malondialdehyde levels, antioxidant enzymes activities as in a statistically significant manner in each group. Useful effect of lycopene was determined both in non-diabetic and diabetic treatment groups against furan according to the used experimental parameters. Although some histopathological alterations were seen in diabetic and non-diabetic/diabetic plus furan-treated group’s ovarians, lycopene restored these variations near to normal levels in furan + lycopene treated groups for in 28 days. Additionally, the results of our immunohistochemical analysis and alterations of the oxidative stress parameters results also supported these findings.ConclusionsOur result confirms that lycopene has protective effect and significantly altered diabetes and furan-induced toxicity in the rat ovarian tissue.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.