Royal Jelly Can Diminish Secondary Neuronal Damage After
Experimental Spinal Cord Injury in Rabbits
Food Chem Toxicol, 2012 Apr 17
The aim of this experimental study was to investigate the
neuroprotective effect of Royal jelly (RJ) on traumatic spinal cord injury
(SCI).
Twenty-one New Zealand male rabbits, weighing between 2.5
and 3.0kg were divided into three groups: Sham (no drug or operation, n=7),
Control (laminectomy+single dose of 1ml/kg saline orally, after trauma; n=7)
and RJ (laminectomy+100mg/kg RJ, orally, after trauma, n=7). Laminectomy was
performed at T10 and balloon catheter was applied extradurally for traumatic
SCI. Four and 24h after surgery, rabbits were evaluated according to the Tarlov
scoring system. Blood, cerebrospinal fluid and tissue sample from spinal cord
were taken for measurements of antioxidant status or detection of apoptosis.
Four hours after SCI, all animals in control or RJ treated groups became
paraparesic.
Significant improvement was observed in RJ treated group,
24h after SCI, with respect to control.
Traumatic SCI led to increase in the lipid peroxidation and
decrease enzymic or non-enzymic endogenous antioxidative defense systems, and
increase in apoptotic cell numbers.
RJ treatment mostly prevented lipid peroxidation and also
augmented endogenous enzymic or non-enzymic antioxidative defense systems.
Again, RJ treatment significantly decreased the apoptotic cell number induced
by SCI.
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