Evaluation of the Role of Oxidative Stress and Inflammation in the Causation of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Human Subjects
Abstract
Objective: To inspect the impact of oxidative stress and inflammation on the causation of type 2 diabetes mellitus in human subjects.
Methodology: ACase - control study on 200 randomly enrolled subjects (age range 20-40 years), including 100 T2 DM patients (56 males and 44 females) and 100 healthy controls (60 males and 40 females) matched for socioeconomic status were randomly enrolled from and were inhabitants of Hyderabad and Jamshoro districts of Sindh province, this research was conducted at postgraduate research laboratory of Institute of Biochemistry, University of Sindh Jamshoro from January-December 2019. Serum samples of the subjects were analyzed by kit methods for the amounts of creatinine, uric acid, total antioxidants, iron, C-reactive protein, superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, xanthine oxidase, lactate dehydrogenase, malondialdehyde and nuclear factor kappa- B. Urine samples collected on spot were investigated for pH and protein content by using urine dip strip automatic reader “Urisys 1100* Roche”.
Results: Physical measurements disclosed that obesity was more common in diabetic patients (26%) than in controls (10%). Serum analysis results showed that T2 DM patients as against the controls had significantly raised superoxide dismutase (p<0.01) and C-reactive protein (p<0.005); and decreased uric acid (p<0.006), iron (p<0.01) and xanthine oxidase (p<0.04) levels. Spot urine analysis results showed that controls compared to T2 DM patients excreted significantly (p<0.003) more acidic urine.
Conclusion: From the results of this study, we concluded that oxidative stress together with low grade inflammation plays an important role in the causation of T2 DM.
Keywords: Diabetes Mellitus, Antioxidants, Inflammation, Oxidative Stress
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Submission of a manuscript to the journal implies that all authors have read and agreed to the content of the undertaking form or the Terms and Conditions.
When an article is accepted for publication, the author(s) retain the copyright and are required to grant the publisher the right of first publication and other non-exclusive publishing rights to JLUMHS.
Articles published in the Journal of Liaquat University of Medical & health sciences are open access articles under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial - Share Alike 4.0 License. This license permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium; provided the original work is properly cited and initial publication in this journal. This is in accordance with the BOAI definition of open access. In addition to that users are allowed to remix, tweak and build upon the work non-commercially as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms. Or, in certain cases it can be stated that all articles and content there in are published under creative commons license unless stated otherwise.