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Effect of Li-ESWT on Testicular Tissue and Function in Androgen-Deficient Rat Model.

Wen Jie TianSeung Hwan JeonHyuk Jin ChoU-Syn HaSung-Hoo HongJi Youl LeeJun Jie PiaoZhong Cheng XinYe Gang ChenHong Yu FengSae Woong KimWoong Jin BaeMahadevan Raj Rajasekaran
Published in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2022)
Low-intensity extracorporeal shockwave therapy (Li-ESWT), as a microenergy therapy, has the effects of inhibiting oxidative stress, antiapoptosis, and tissue repair, which is increasingly applied to a variety of diseases. Our research aims to explore the protective effects of Li-ESWT in the aging rat model and its possible molecular mechanism through in vivo and in vitro experiments. In vitro, TM3 Leydig cells incubated with H 2 O 2 were treated with Li-ESWT at 4 energy levels (0.01, 0.05, 0.1, and 0.2 mJ/mm 2 ). In vivo, we employed an androgen-deficient rat model to simulate male aging and treated it with Li-ESWT at three different energy levels (0.01, 0.05, and 0.2 mJ/mm 2 ). Li-ESWT increased the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in TM3 cells, improved antioxidant capacity, and reduced apoptosis, with the effect being most significant at 0.05 mJ/mm 2 energy level. In androgen-deficient rat model, LI-ESWT can improve sperm count, motility, and serum testosterone level, enhancing tissue antioxidant capacity and antiapoptotic ability, and the effect is most significant at 0.05 mJ/mm 2 energy level. Therefore, Li-ESWT at an appropriate energy level can improve sperm count, motility, and serum testosterone levels in androgen-deficient rat models, reduce oxidative stress in the testis, and increase antioxidant capacity and antiapoptotic abilities. The mechanism of this condition might be related to the increased VEGF expression in Leydig cells by Li-ESWT.
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