415702

Effect of Dietary Zinc Supplementation on Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Adult Male Albino Rats

Article

Last updated: 29 Mar 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Basic Sciences

Abstract

Background: Diabetes mellitus [DM] is one of the most prevalent and dangerous diseases affecting public health worldwide. Frequent urine causes the body to lose zinc through hyperzincuria, hypozincemia, and reduced absorption, which results in zinc [Zn] insufficiency.
Objective: The aim of this work was to study effect of dietary zinc administration on type 2 DM induced by alloxan in adult male albino rats fed on the high fructose diet [HFD].
Materials and Methods: The study included 32 adult male albino rats, divided into four equal groups: Group 1 [Control] received 1 ml normal saline/day by gavaging, Group 2 [Zn group] received 100 mg/kg/day Zn by gavaging, group 3 [diabetic], where diabetes was induced by alloxan as well as high fructose diet [HFD], Group 4 [diabetic with Zn supplement], where diabetic rats received 100 mg/kg/day Zn by gavaging. At the end of the experiment, rats were sacrificed, blood samples were obtained to measure fasting blood glucose [FBG], insulin level, glycated hemoglobin [HbAlc], homeostasis Model Assessment for Insulin resistance [HOM-IR], liver enzymes [Alanine transaminase [ALT], Aspartate transaminase [AST]], lipid profile, oxidative stress markers [Malonhydialdehyde [MDA], total antioxidant capacity [TAC], catalase [CAT] activity, Glutathione Peroxidase activity [GPX]] and serum creatinine. Histopathological study of liver and pancreatic tissues were performed.
Results: Alloxan injection led to a significant increase of blood glucose, HbA1c, cholesterol, TG and LDL levels, liver enzymes and MDA while insulin, HDL, catalase and GPX levels were significantly decreased significantly compared to the control and ZN-supplemented groups. ZN supplementation led to a significant improvement of all laboratory parameters. The results were supported by the results of histological examinations.
Conclusion: The study clarifies the beneficial effect of Zinc supplementation in diabetic rats as Zn improved the state of hyperglycemia, oxidative stress, dyslipidemia and liver dysfunction induced by DM. 

DOI

10.21608/ijma.2025.349788.2093

Keywords

zinc, Diabetes mellitus, Oxidative Stress, High fructose diet, albino rats

Authors

First Name

Tahany B.

Last Name

Elmetwally

MiddleName

AA

Affiliation

Department of Medical Physiology, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Damietta, Egypt.

Email

tahanybahgat20@gmail.com

City

New Damietta

Orcid

-

First Name

Mohammad Adel

Last Name

Abd El-Latif

MiddleName

Shalaby

Affiliation

Department of Medical Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt.

Email

drashalaby@hotmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Ahmad

Last Name

Alkot

MiddleName

Mohammad Farag

Affiliation

Department of Medical Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt.

Email

dr.ahmadalkot@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

First Name

Noura F.

Last Name

Elmongy

MiddleName

AA

Affiliation

Department of Medical Physiology, Damietta Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Damietta, Egypt.

Email

dr.nourafathy20@domazhermedicine.edu.eg

City

New Damietta

Orcid

-

First Name

Mohamed I.

Last Name

Arif

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Clinical Pathology, Faculty of Medicine -Al-Azhar University Cairo, Egypt.

Email

drmarif2022@gmail.com

City

-

Orcid

-

Volume

7

Article Issue

4

Related Issue

54764

Issue Date

2025-04-01

Receive Date

2025-01-02

Publish Date

2025-04-01

Page Start

5,587

Page End

5,597

Print ISSN

2636-4174

Online ISSN

2682-3780

Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_415702.html

Detail API

http://journals.ekb.eg?_action=service&article_code=415702

Order

10

Type

Original Article

Type Code

816

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

International Journal of Medical Arts

Publication Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Effect of Dietary Zinc Supplementation on Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in Adult Male Albino Rats

Details

Type

Article

Created At

29 Mar 2025