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Title: Enrichment of rat hepatic organelles by vitamin E administered subcutaneously. Author: Gumpricht E, Devereaux MW, Traber M, Sokol RJ. Journal: Free Radic Biol Med; 2004 Dec 01; 37(11):1712-7. PubMed ID: 15528030. Abstract: Novel modes of administering antioxidants to improve delivery to targeted tissues or cells may be advantageous in preventing oxidant-induced pathologies. Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) has been shown to be protective in several models of liver injury. The objectives of this study were: (1) to determine if subcutaneously (s.q.) administered emulsified vitamin E enriched liver and hepatic subcellular fractions with the antioxidant and (2) to carry out a time-dependent analysis of serum and tissue vitamin E in rats receiving daily s.q. vitamin E. In the first experiment rats injected daily s.q. with emulsified vitamin E for 9 d increased serum, total liver, liver mitochondria, and liver microsomes by 8-, 16-, 30-, and 29-fold, respectively, compared with placebo injections. Similar enrichment was observed after intramuscular injections. In the second experiment, daily doses of s.q. vitamin E increased liver concentrations 40-fold by 9 d, which decreased to 22-fold by 18 d, whereas serum adjusted vitamin E levels maximized with a 24-fold increase by day 3 and plateaued thereafter. In conclusion, s.q. administration of emulsified vitamin E to rats resulted in substantially elevated serum and liver concentrations of alpha-tocopherol compared with levels achievable by dietary supplementation. The s.q. route of administration is a potentially effective parenteral mode of delivery of vitamin E for conditions in which hepatic oxidative stress is present.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]