Oxidative Stress Markers and Antioxidant Status in Human Hypertension

Background: There is growing evidence that oxidative stress contributes to hypertension justified by observations, predominantly in animal models. Objective: The aim of the present study was to observe the relationship, if any, between systemic arterial hypertension and biochemical markers of oxidat...

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Main Authors: Rajarshi Sarkar (Author), Kaushik Bhowmick (Author), Angshuman Dey (Author), Rabin Bhattacharya (Author), Indranil Chakraborty (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Al Ameen Medical College, 2011-10-01T00:00:00Z.
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Summary:Background: There is growing evidence that oxidative stress contributes to hypertension justified by observations, predominantly in animal models. Objective: The aim of the present study was to observe the relationship, if any, between systemic arterial hypertension and biochemical markers of oxidative stress, inflammation and aging. Materials & Methods: 50 subjects with hypertension and 50 age and sex-matched controls were included in the study. The nitrate-nitrite ratio, malondialdehyde (measured as thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, superoxide dismutase activity, and high sensitive C-Reactive Protein were assayed on samples from these subjects by standardized methodology. The data obtained was statistically analyzed. Results: Statistically significant mean values of serum nitrate-nitrite ratio and plasma superoxide dismutase activity were lower and that of serum malondialdehyde was higher in hypertensive subjects when compared to the controls. Serum nitrate-nitrite ratio, malondialdehyde and superoxide dismutase activity exhibited statistically significant multivariate correlation with each other while High Sensitive C-Reactive Protein was not significantly correlated. Nitrate-nitrite ratio was significantly lower with aging both in normotensive and hypertensive subjects. Conclusion: The present study confirmed the role of oxidation mediated tissue damage in generation of hypertension and suggested the usefulness of examining nitrate:nitrite ratio as a surrogate marker of the pathophysiologic process leading to generation of human hypertension. The study also confirmed an exacerbation of oxidative stress with advancement of age in both study groups
Item Description:0974-1143