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. 2013 Apr 1;2(2):152–153. doi: 10.12860/JNP.2013.26

Plants antioxidants: From laboratory to clinic

Mahmoud Rafieian-Kopaei 1,*, Azar Baradaran 2, Morteza Rafieian 1
PMCID: PMC3891140  PMID: 24475444

Abstract

Implication for health policy/practice/research/medical education: Eating whole vegetables, fruits and grains, which all are rich in antioxidants, provides protection against most of oxidative stress induced diseases, however, this does not mean that antioxidants will prevent or fix the problem, especially not when they are taken out of their natural context. It should be noted that although the results of the studies are inconclusive, but most of the studies conducted till now have had limitations due to their relatively short duration and conducting on patients with existing diseases.

Keywords: Free radicals, Nephrotoxicity, Antioxidants

Dear Editor,

ree radicals are usually generated in the body as byproducts of turning food into energy or by sunlight’s action on the skin and eyes (1). They all have a great appetite to steal electrons from any nearby substances and alter their structures or functions. Although oxidation reactions are crucial for life, they can also be damaging. Free radicals can damage and change the instructions of a DNA. They are able to alter a cell’s membrane and change the flow of what enters or leaves the cells. It may also change a circulating low-density lipoprotein (LDL) molecule so that it gets trapped easily in an artery wall (2). The body is not defenseless against these free radicals. Antioxidants work by giving electrons to free radicals without turning into electron-scavenging substances themselves.It should be noted that some substances that act as antioxidants in one situation may act as prooxidants in other situations (2). ntioxidants are different substances such as vitamin C, vitamin E, carotenoids, minerals such as selenium and manganese, as well as glutathione, coenzyme Q10, lipoic acid, phytoestrogens, flavonoids, phenols, polyphenols, and so on (3-5). Antioxidants have come to attention since 1990s, when scientists found that free radicals were involved in atherosclerosis, vision loss, cancer and some of other chronic diseases. They found that people with low intake of vegetables and fruits were at greater risk for development of these diseases than others. Clinical trials began testing the impact of single substances such as vitamin E, vitamin C and beta-carotene against cancer, heart disease and others. Although free radicals contribute to chronic diseases such as cancer (6,7), diabetes (8,9), atherosclerosis (7,8), heart disease , nephrotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, cognitive (6-9) and vision loss (10) and a lot of researches, especially laboratory trials, show benefits for antioxidants against these conditions, however, long clinical trials are inconclusive and do not show that antioxidant supplements have a substantial impact on these diseases. While it is believed that substances found naturally in vegetables, fruits, and grains help prevent a variety of chronic diseases, it is unlikely that antioxidants in all conditions can do the same. The results of the large studies offer little evidence that taking vitamin E, vitamin C, beta-carotene, or other single antioxidants protect against these diseases (6-9). Two studies even showed that taking beta-carotene may actually increase the chances of developing lung cancer in smokers (11,12). While the results of the large studies offer little evidence that taking vitamin E, vitamin C, beta-carotene, or other single antioxidants protect against cancer, atherosclerosis and other chronic diseases, the findings about combinations are also complicated and not entirely clear (12). Why natural whole products such as vegetables and fruits are able to prevent or cure a variety of chronic diseases in clinical trials but single antioxidants or even their combination do not act the same, is not clear. What is clear is that antioxidants almost certainly evolve as parts of elaborate networks. This means that no single substance can do the work of the whole crowd (2). In conclusion free radicals may contribute to chronic diseases such as nephrotoxicity, heart diseases, cancer and Alzheimer. Although abundant evidence suggests that eating whole vegetables, fruits and grains, which all are rich in antioxidants, provides protection against most of these oxidative stress induced diseases, however, this does not mean that antioxidants will prevent or fix the problem, especially not when they are taken out of their natural context. It should be noted that although the results of the studies are inconclusive, but most of the studies conducted till now have had limitations due to their relatively short duration and conducting on patients with existing diseases.

Authors’ Contribution

MR prepared the sources, MRK prepared the draft and AB edited the article.

Financial Disclosure

No financial support by any institution.

Conflict of interest

None to declare

Please cite this paper as: Rafieian-Kopaei M, Baradaran A, Rafieian M. Plants antioxidants: From laboratory to clinic. J Nephropathology. 2013; 2(2):152-153, DOI: 10.5812/nephropathol.12116

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