Alternative Medicine Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Alternative Medicine, including details on complementary medicine, alternative therapies, homeopathy. | ||||||||
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Morphologic changes induced by oral long-term treatment with 8-prenylnaringenin in the uterus, vagina, and mammary gland of castrated rats.Rimoldi G, Christoffel J, Wuttke W Department of Clinical and Experimental Endocrinology, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany. OBJECTIVE: The flavonoid 8-prenylnaringenin (8-PN) is found in hops, and hence in beer, and is also increasingly consumed as a food supplement. It is the strongest known phytoestrogen, which makes it a good candidate as an alternative to hormone therapy. Its putatively undesired estrogenic effects in the uterus and mammary gland have not yet been thoroughly investigated. Therefore, we performed a long-term oral administration experiment. DESIGN: Rats were ovariectomized and fed for 3 months with soy-free chow containing estradiol (E(2)) or 8-PN, both in two doses (8-PN: 6.77 mg or 68.42 mg/kg body weight; E(2): 0.17 mg or 0.7 mg/kg body weight) or no additives. Analysis was mainly focused on morphologic and immunocytochemical parameters. Expression of proliferating cell nuclear antigen as a proliferation marker and of progesterone receptor was quantified in the mammary gland. RESULTS: Uteri of animals treated with both E(2) doses and the high 8-PN dose had increased weight and showed histologic estrogen-induced features. 8-PN at the high dose induced epithelial polypoid formation unique to this group. Compared to the atrophic controls, both E(2) doses and the high 8-PN dose induced hyperplastic epithelia in the vagina. The high doses of E(2) and 8-PN caused secretion in the mammary gland, whereas proliferation and progesterone receptor expression were stimulated by both E(2) doses and the high 8-PN dose. CONCLUSIONS: E(2) and 8-PN share many effects in the three studied organs, but some differences in the mechanism of action appear to exist. Published 9 August 2006 in Menopause, 13(4): 669-77.
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