Abstract Occupational exposure to potentially harmful substances is one of the dangers associated with industrial jobs. This study evaluated the modulatory influence of selected dietary polyphenols on the pulmonotoxic and… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Occupational exposure to potentially harmful substances is one of the dangers associated with industrial jobs. This study evaluated the modulatory influence of selected dietary polyphenols on the pulmonotoxic and testiculotoxic effects of crude acetylene, an industrial gas used in welding metals. Wistar rats were exposed to 58 000 ppm acetylene, 20 min daily for 30 days, in a 36 L glass inhalation chamber. Some acetylene-exposed animals were treated concurrently with 30 mg/kg quercetin, rutin, caffeic acid, ferulic acid, or coumaric acid. At the end of the treatment sessions, the levels of superoxide dismutase, reduced glutathione, glutathione peroxidase, lactate dehydrogenase, and hormonal markers in rats exposed to acetylene were significantly decreased, with a concomitant increase in lipid peroxidation, nitric oxide level, cholesterol concentration, and histopathological abnormalities. These damaging biochemical and histopathological changes were significantly ameliorated in animals administered the polyphenols. Quercetin showed greater ameliorative activity than rutin while the phenolic acids exhibited increasing levels of ameliorative activity in the order: caffeic acid > ferulic acid > coumaric acid. These results indicate that inhalation of crude acetylene is deleterious to the lungs and testes, and polyphenols provide protection against these detrimental effects.
               
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