Validation of a commercially available photometric analytical system for assessment of plasma oxidative status in healthy horses

VETERINARY IMMUNOLOGY AND IMMUNOPATHOLOGY(2023)

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Abstract
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are the end-products of physiologic functions in health. Oxidative stress occurs when endogenous antioxidants are insufficient to neutralize ROS in the system. As a result, ROS can damage DNA, RNA, proteins, lipids, and cell organelles. To obtain accurate measurements of plasma oxidative stress, levels of both oxidants and antioxidants must be measured. This study validates a commercially available, semiquantitative, photometric analytical system that measures systemic determinants of reactive oxygen metabolites (dROM) and plasma antioxidant capacity (PAC) in stored equine plasma. The objectives of this work were: 1) to validate a photometric analytical system to quantify dROM and PAC in equine plasma; and 2) to determine expected results for these tests in healthy adult horses. We hypothesized that this system would reliably and reproducibly assess dROM and PAC in equine plasma. We observed expected, dose-dependent increases in dROM generated by adding increasing concentrations of H2O2 or ascorbic acid to equine plasma to provide samples containing a known quantity of oxidants or antioxidants respectively. Mean dROM value in healthy horses was 103.3 +/- 20.7 U. Carr and mean PAC was 2881.0 +/- 313.9 U. Cor. This system reliably and reproducibly quantified dROM and PAC in equine plasma samples.
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Key words
Horse,Oxidative stress,ROS,Antioxidants
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