Differences reported in the lifespan and aging of male Wistar rats maintained on diets containing fat with different fatty acid profiles (virgin olive, sunflower or fish oils) are not reflected by histopathological lesions found at death in central nervous and endocrine systems
Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Varela López, Alfonso; Ramírez Tortosa, César Luis; Ramos Pleguezuelos, Francisco M.; Quiles Morales, José LuisEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Aging Geropathology Histopathology Lipotoxicity Nutrition
Date
2022-08-17Referencia bibliográfica
Alfonso Varela-López... [et al.]. Differences reported in the lifespan and aging of male Wistar rats maintained on diets containing fat with different fatty acid profiles (virgin olive, sunflower or fish oils) are not reflected by histopathological lesions found at death in central nervous and endocrine systems, Food and Chemical Toxicology, Volume 168, 2022, 113357, ISSN 0278-6915, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fct.2022.113357]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government AGL2008-01057; Government of Andalusia AGR832Abstract
The present study was designed to examine if dietary fat sources that have shown differences in lifespan and if
some aging-related aspects can modulate the range of histopathologic changes in central nervous and endocrine
systems that occur during the lifespan of Wistar rats. Moreover, it was attempted to gain insight into the relationship
between longevity and the development of the different pathological changes, as well as possible
interaction with diet. In order to achieve this, male Wistar rats were randomly assigned to three experimental
groups fed semisynthetic and isoenergetic diets from weaning until death with different dietary fat sources,
namely virgin olive, sunflower, or fish oil. An individual follow-up until death of each animal was performed.
Incidence, severity, and burden of specific or group (i.e., neoplastic or non-neoplastic proliferative and nonproliferative)
of lesions was calculated along with individual’s disease and individual organ lesion burden.
Most of the histopathological lesions found have been described in previous studies. Neoplasms, and in particular
pituitary adenomas followed by brain tumors, were the most prevalent lesions found in the rats and the main
cause of death involving both systems. Incidence of brain lesions was associated with age-at-death. Assayed
dietary fats did not present differential effects on pathological changes occurring in endocrine and central
nervous systems throughout rat lifespan.