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Long-term exposure to arsenic in drinking water leads to myocardial damage by oxidative stress and reduction in NO.

Yi-Xin CuiLu DongMeng ZhangYi-Nan LiuYong-Hui ChenMing-Zhao JiaKun-Pan ChenHui WangYa-Wen ShiTian-You MaJing-Hong Chen
Published in: Toxicology (2023)
Chronic arsenic exposure causes myocardial damage. The aim of this study is to investigate if oxidative stress and reduction in NO is involved in the myocardial damage induced by arsenic in drinking water. Rats were divided into a control group and different doses of sodium arsenite. With increasing sodium arsenite concentrations in drinking water, localised inflammatory foci and necrotic myocardial tissues were gradually observed. Compared to the control group, the activities and gene expression of antioxidant enzymes in arsenic-exposed rats decreased. NO content and the NOS activity as well as the expression of NOS mRNA in the myocardial tissue of exposed rats, decreased, and the extracellular NO content of cardiomyocytes treated with sodium arsenite also decreased. The rate of cell apoptosis induced by sodium arsenite decreased after treatment with sodium nitroprusside (an NO donor). In conclusion, arsenic exposure in drinking water can lead to myocardial injury and cardiomyocyte apoptosis through oxidative stress and a reduction in NO content.
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