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      Assessment of the Antioxidant/Hypolipidemic Relationship of Sideritis hyssopifolia in an Experimental Animal Model

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          Abstract

          Many publications have described the potential cardioprotective action of different medicinal plants, relating this effect with blood lipid levels. However, these publications do not justify the right amount of plant administered, which can vary greatly. Sideritis hyssopifolia is a little woody plant endemic to western and southwestern Europe. We have quantified its antioxidant activity, which can be used as an indicator of its cardioprotective action. This study evaluates the antioxidant capacity of Sideritis hyssopifolia to design a feed whose hypolipidemic effects are proven in cholesterol-fed New Zealand rabbits. Antioxidant action was assessed in infusions, which were prepared with 1 or 3 g of plant in 200 mL of water by using an ABTS assay and expressed as Ascorbic acid Equivalent Antioxidant Capacity (AEAC). Aqueous infusions with infusion times of 10 min and prepared with 3 g plant exhibited the strongest antioxidant activity. Sideritis hyssopifolia showed an intermediate antioxidant capacity for the concentrations and times of the infusion tested. According to our results, we suggest incorporating 2.36 g of S. hyssopifolia every 150 g of rabbit feeding stuff (15.73 g/kg). This chow decreased cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, LDL-cholesterol, and triglycerides levels in cholesterol-fed rabbits, as well as the atherogenic index. This reduction was similar to that obtained with simvastatin.

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          Most cited references47

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          Ascorbate is an outstanding antioxidant in human blood plasma.

          We have shown recently that the temporal order of antioxidant consumption in human blood plasma exposed to a constant flux of aqueous peroxyl radicals is ascorbate = protein thiols greater than bilirubin greater than urate greater than alpha-tocopherol and that detectable lipid peroxidation starts only after ascorbate has been consumed completely. In this paper, we show that it is indeed ascorbate that completely protects plasma lipids against detectable peroxidative damage induced by aqueous peroxyl radicals and that ascorbate is the only plasma antioxidant that can do so. Plasma devoid of ascorbate, but no other endogenous antioxidant, is extremely vulnerable to oxidant stress and susceptible to peroxidative damage to lipids. The plasma proteins' thiols, although they become oxidized immediately upon exposure to aqueous peroxyl radicals, are inefficient radical scavengers and appear to be consumed mainly by autoxidation. Our data demonstrate that ascorbate is the most effective aqueous-phase antioxidant in human blood plasma and suggest that in humans ascorbate is a physiological antioxidant of major importance for protection against diseases and degenerative processes caused by oxidant stress.
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            Oxidative stress and cardiovascular injury: Part I: basic mechanisms and in vivo monitoring of ROS.

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              Low density lipoprotein oxidation and its pathobiological significance.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Molecules
                Molecules
                molecules
                Molecules
                MDPI
                1420-3049
                29 May 2019
                June 2019
                : 24
                : 11
                : 2049
                Affiliations
                Pharmacology, Institute of Biomedicine (IBIOMED), University of Leon, 24071 Leon, Spain; esther.coto@ 123456gmail.com (E.C.); jjgarv@ 123456unileon.es (J.J.G.); mjdiel@ 123456unileon.es (M.J.D.); jmrodl@ 123456unileon.es (A.M.S.); msiev@ 123456unileon.es (M.S.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: mnferm@ 123456unileon.es ; Tel.: +34-987-29-15-28
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2101-3906
                Article
                molecules-24-02049
                10.3390/molecules24112049
                6600331
                31146427
                bc30a07b-b770-4267-a329-a4bb4acad2cf
                © 2019 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 27 April 2019
                : 28 May 2019
                Categories
                Article

                antioxidant activity,atherogenic index,cholesterol,rabbit,sideritis hyssopifolia

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