پديد آورندگان :
Neyestani, Tirang R. نويسنده , Shariat-Zadeh, Nastaran نويسنده , Gharavi, Aיazam نويسنده , Kalayi, Ali نويسنده , Khalaji Niloufar نويسنده
چكيده لاتين :
This study examined the possible effects of lycopene at physiological dosage and body fat mass on
the humoral immune response in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM).
A total of 35 patients with Typ2 diabetes mellitus from both sexes aged 54±9 yrs from the Iranian
Diabetes Society were introduced into a double blind placebo controlled clinical trial conducted for 2
months. After a 2-week lycopene free diet washout period, patients were allocated to either lycopene
supplementation group (10mg/d) (n=16) or placebo age- and sex matched group (n=19) for 8 weeks.
Patients were instructed to keep their diets and physical activities as unchanged as possible.
Lycopene supplements increased serum lycopene levels (p<0.001). While intake of dietary energy
and nutrients did not change in either groups, the ratio of total antioxidant capacity to
malondialdehyde increased significantly in the lycopene group (p=0.007). There was an inverse
correlation between serum levels of lycopene and those of IgG (r= -0.338, p=0.008). On the contrary,
changes of serum levels of lycopene directly correlated with those of IgM (r=0.466, p=0.005).
Interestingly, changes of the amount of fat mass correlated directly with those of serum IgG (r=0.415,
p=0.044) but inversely with of serum IgM (r= -0.469, p=0.021).
While truncal fat might promote adaptive humoral immunity, lycopene probably by inhibiting
MDA-LDL formation might attenuate T cell dependent adaptive (pro-atherogenic) humoral immune
response. These findings may have preventive implications in long term diabetic complications,
notably atherogenesis.