A. Punz et al., Multivitamin administration before ischemia reduces ischemia-reperfusion injury in rabbit skeletal muscle, CLIN NUTR, 18(4), 1999, pp. 219-226
This study investigated the effect of a multivitamin preparation administer
ed before ischemia or before reperfusion, on ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) inj
ury of skeletal muscle. An in vivo hindlimb skeletal muscle I/R model (2.5
h/2 h) was carried out on adult New Zealand white rabbits. Animals used as
I/R models were treated with a multivitamin preparation (0.4 ml/kg bw i.v.
bolus), containing alpha-tocopherol, ascorbic acid, retinol, vitamin B comp
lex, 30 min before starting ischemia (group MVisc) or 5 min before reperfus
ion (group MVrep) and compared to animals with I/R without treatment (group
IR) and sham operated animals (group SHAM). Interstitial edema (muscle int
erfiber area, %MIFA) and changes in microvessel size (microvessel cross sec
tional area, MVCSA, mu m(2)) were measured. Plasma malondialdehyde concentr
ations (MDA-TBA, nmol/ml) served as a measure of lipid peroxidation.
After 2 h of reperfusion, ischemia-reperfusion developed a significant micr
ovascular constriction and an interstitial edema (IR, vs SHAM; P < 0.01), b
ut administration of antioxidative vitamins before the onset of ischemia re
duced microvascular constriction and edema formation (P < 0.05 vs IR group)
. In a similar manner, administration of vitamins before ischemia lowered p
lasma MDA-TBA levels as compared to the untreated group during reperfusion
(P < 0.05). In animals treated with vitamins before reperfusion, the bioche
mical and morphological results showed no differences as compared to the un
treated group.
Antioxidative treatment with a multivitamin preparation exerted a beneficia
l effect on I/R injury of skeletal muscle when the aforementioned vitamins
were administered before ischemia but not before the onset of reperfusion.