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Phagocytosis in riboflavin- or pyridoxine-deficient rats

โœ Scribed by Rudraraju Lakshmi; Amble V. Lakshmi; Mahtab S. Bamji


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
344 KB
Volume
5
Category
Article
ISSN
0955-2863

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โœฆ Synopsis


The effect of riboflavin or pyridoxine deficiency on phagocytosis was examined in rats to elucidate the mechanism of impaired wound healing in these deficiencies reported earlier. Phagocytic ingestion by peritoneal leukocytes was 60.4% and 68%, respectively, in riboflavin-or pyridoxine-deficient rats compared with weight-matched control animals. Lactate production, which is a measure of glycolytic activity and exocytic degranulation, were also reduced to 74% and 65%, respectively, in riboflavin deficiency but were unaltered in pyridoxine deficiency. Food restriction per se increased production of superoxide anion by leukocytes by two fold, and it was further increased by 1.5 fold during particle uptake only in pyridoxine deficiency. However, postphagocytic digestive events, as judged by the activities of acid phosphatase and collagenase in the incised wound, were not affected in either deficiency. Thus, impaired phagocytosis other than reduced collagenization (reported earlier) may contribute to the adverse effects of vitamins B2 or B6 deficiencies on wound healing.


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