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74787

Histological and Immunohistochemical Study of Selenium Regenerative Effect on Submandibular and Sublingual Glands of Aging Rats

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Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Background: The role of Selenium as an antioxidant has become a point of interest for its importance in prevention of cancer and other systemic diseases especially those associated with aging.
Objectives: The aim of the present investigation was to investigate the effect of Selenium supplementation on the submandibular and sublingual salivary glands of aging rats through:
1- Histological examination.
2- Immunohistochemical localization of Ki67.
Materials and Methods: Thirty young adult male albino rats with body weight ranged from 80-110 gram and of 2 month age were used and divided into the following groups. Group I (control group): Consisted of 20 rats, subdivided into 2 subgroups. Group I.1:10 animals were sacrificed after one month to serve as young controls. Group I.2:10 animals were left till the end of the experiment to serve as old controls. Group II: 10 animals received Selenium 150 µg/kg diet for the whole experimental period. The experiment lasted for 9 months.
Results: histological results revealed that aging caused devastating effects on the histological structure of submandibular and sublingual salivary glands. Selenium markedly modulated the action of aging process and increased the regenerative capacity of submandibular and sublingual glands. According to expression intensity of Ki67 stain in submandibular and sublingual glands, there was statistically significant difference between young, selenium and old groups. In general, expression intensity of Ki67 stain was the highest in the young control group followed by selenium group and lowest in old control group. Also, ki67 expression was significantly higher in sublingual than submandibular glands.
Conclusions: Selenium was documented to have a powerful and beneficial antiaging effect. This faced lights around the promising role of selenium in the new era of regenerative medicine. Sublingual gland was more resistant to regressive changes of aging than submandibular gland.

DOI

10.21608/edj.2019.74787

Keywords

aging, selenium, submandibular gland, Sublingual gland, Ki67

Authors

First Name

Heba

Last Name

Elsaied

MiddleName

A.

Affiliation

Lecturer in Oral Biology Department, Faculty of Dentistry, Suez Canal University

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Volume

65

Article Issue

Issue 4 - October (Oral Medicine, X-Ray, Oral Biology & Oral Pathology)

Related Issue

10705

Issue Date

2019-10-01

Receive Date

2020-03-01

Publish Date

2019-10-01

Page Start

3,413

Page End

3,426

Print ISSN

0070-9484

Online ISSN

2090-2360

Link

https://edj.journals.ekb.eg/article_74787.html

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https://edj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=74787

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5

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Original Article

Type Code

254

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Egyptian Dental Journal

Publication Link

https://edj.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023