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Phospholipid oxidation and carotenoid supplementation in Alzheimer's disease patients.

O S Ademowo, H K I Dias, I Milic, A Devitt, R Moran et al.
Other Free radical biology & medicine 2017 37 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Randomized Controlled Trial
Tamaño de muestra
37
Población
Alzheimer's patients (n=21) and age-matched controls
Duración
26 weeks
Intervención
Phospholipid oxidation and carotenoid supplementation in Alzheimer's disease patients. Macushield (10mg meso-zeaxanthin, 10mg lutein, 2mg zeaxanthin)
Comparador
placebo (sunflower oil)
Resultado primario
serum POVPC (oxidized phospholipid)
Dirección del efecto
Neutral
Riesgo de sesgo
Moderate

Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative disease, characterised by decline of memory, cognitive function and changes in behaviour. Generic markers of lipid peroxidation are increased in AD and reactive oxygen species have been suggested to be involved in the aetiology of cognitive decline. Carotenoids are depleted in AD serum, therefore we have compared serum lipid oxidation between AD and age-matched control subjects before and after carotenoid supplementation. The novel oxidised phospholipid biomarker 1-palmitoyl-2-(5'-oxo-valeroyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POVPC) was analysed using electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry (MS) with multiple reaction monitoring (MRM), 8-isoprostane (IsoP) was measured by ELISA and ferric reducing antioxidant potential (FRAP) was measured by a colorimetric assay. AD patients (n=21) and healthy age-matched control subjects (n=16) were supplemented with either Macushield™ (10mg meso-zeaxanthin, 10mg lutein, 2mg zeaxanthin) or placebo (sunflower oil) for six months. The MRM-MS method determined serum POVPC sensitively (from 10µl serum) and reproducibly (CV=7.9%). At baseline, AD subjects had higher serum POVPC compared to age-matched controls, (p=0.017) and cognitive function was correlated inversely with POVPC (r=-0.37; p=0.04). After six months of carotenoid intervention, serum POVPC was not different in AD patients compared to healthy controls. However, POVPC was significantly higher in control subjects after six months of carotenoid intervention compared to their baseline (p=0.03). Serum IsoP concentration was unrelated to disease or supplementation. Serum FRAP was significantly lower in AD than healthy controls but was unchanged by carotenoid intervention (p=0.003). In conclusion, serum POVPC is higher in AD patients compared to control subjects, is not reduced by carotenoid supplementation and correlates with cognitive function.

TL;DR

Serum POVPC is higher in AD patients compared to control subjects, is not reduced by carotenoid supplementation and correlates with cognitive function and correlates inversely with mini‐mental state examination.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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