Stimulation of the nicotine antiinflammatory pathway improves food intake and body composition in tumor-bearing rats.
Journal: 2011/June - Nutrition and Cancer
ISSN: 1532-7914
Abstract:
Inflammation contributes to the pathogenesis of cancer anorexia-cachexia syndrome. Nicotine administration reduces cytokine levels and mortality during sepsis. Therefore, nicotine administration may result in improved anorexia-cachexia. Sixteen male Fischer rats inoculated with MCA sarcoma were assigned to random injections of nicotine (NIC; 200 mg/kg BW/d) or saline (C). Food intake (FI), body weight, body composition, interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6 levels were evaluated. Data were analyzed via Student's t-test for paired and unpaired data and ANOVA. FI started declining 12 days after tumor inoculation both in C and NIC rats, but the decline was significantly attenuated by nicotine administration. At the end of the study, lean body mass wasting was more severe in C rats than in NIC rats (P<0.05), whereas a trend toward attenuation of fat mass depletion was observed. IL-1 circulating levels were significantly lower in NIC rats than in C rats (114±21 pg/mL vs. 190±35 pg/mL, respectively; P<0.01), whereas the reduction of IL-6 levels in NIC rats was only marginally not significant when compared to C rats (555±174 pg/mL vs. 721±160 pg/mL, respectively; P=0.06). Our data suggest that the nicotinic antiinflammatory pathway may represent an interesting and possibly effective therapy for anorexia-cachexia syndrome.
Relations:
Citations
(4)
Diseases
(1)
Conditions
(3)
Drugs
(1)
Chemicals
(4)
Organisms
(3)
Processes
(2)
Affiliates
(1)
Similar articles
Articles by the same authors
Discussion board
Collaboration tool especially designed for Life Science professionals.Drag-and-drop any entity to your messages.