Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://repositorio.pediatria.gob.mx:8180/handle/20.500.12103/2820
Título : Age-related sex differences in glutathione peroxidase and oxidative DNA damage in a healthy mexican population
Creador: Mendoza Núñez V.M
Nivel de acceso: Open access
Palabras clave : Adulto
Factores de Edad
Ensayo Cometa
Estudios Transversales | | Daño del ADN
Femenino
Glutatión Peroxidasa - sangre
Humanos
Lipid Peroxides - sangre
Masculino
México
Mediana Edad
Estrés Oxidativo - fisiología
Factores Sexuales
Hábito de Fumar
Superóxido Dismutasa - sangre
Encuestas y Cuestionarios
Sustancias Reactivas al Ácido Tiobarbitúrico - análisis
Adulto Joven
Adult
Age Factors
Comet Assay
Cross-Sectional Studies
DNA Damage
Female
Glutathione Peroxidase - blood
Humans
Lipid Peroxides - blood
Male
Mexico
Middle Aged
Oxidative Stress - physiology
Sex Factors
Smoking
Superoxide Dismutase - blood
Surveys and Questionnaires
Thiobarbituric Acid Reactive Substances - analysis
Young Adult
Descripción : Background and objective: It has been proposed that women have an estrogen activity-linked biological antioxidant advantage and that this advantage is lost in the postmenopausal stage. The latter remains controversial. Our aim was to determine age-related sex differences in oxidative stress and oxidative DNA damage in a healthy Mexican population. Methods: A cross-sectional and comparative study was carried out in a convenience sample of 162 healthy subjects aged as follows: (1) 25-44 years (n=35 women and 38 men), (2) 45-64 years (n=41 women and 27 men), and (3) ≥65 years (n=13 women and 8 men). We measured plasma lipoperoxides (LPO), superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), and DNA damage by comet assay. Results: We found greater activity of GPx in women than in men according to age increase (p<0.05). This activity is maintained in old age in women. In contrast, men exhibited a significant diminution in GPx according to age increase. Similarly, we observed a greater percentage of cells without oxidative DNA damage in women in the 45-64-years age group and in the group of women aged ≥65 years. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that women have a more efficient antioxidant activity than men, which has been linked with the greater longevity observed in women. © 2010, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Colaborador(es) u otros Autores: Beristain-Pérez A.
Pérez-Vera S.P.
Altamirano-Lozano M.A.
Fecha de publicación : 2010
Tipo de publicación: Artículo
Formato: pdf
Identificador del Recurso : 10.1089/jwh.2009.1684
Fuente: Journal of Women's Health 19(5):919 - 926
URI : http://repositorio.pediatria.gob.mx:8180/handle/20.500.12103/2820
Idioma: eng
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