Certain biochemical effects of garlic oil on rats maintained on high fat-high cholesterol diet
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences
- Vol. 40 (1), 78-80
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf01959111
Abstract
The feeding of a high fat-high cholesterol (HF-HC) diet to normal rats for 1 month increased the lipid components cholesterol and triglyceride in serum, liver and kidneys and decreased the serum albumin very significantly. Administration of garlic oil (100 mg/kg b. wt/day) for 1 month together with the HF-HC diet to another group almost nullified the lipid-increasing and albumin-decreasing effects of that diet. The reduction in total lipids, cholesterol and triglycerides and the restoration to normal level of serum albumin were highly significant in the garlic oil group. Adipose tissue triglyceride lipase activity was significantly increased in both the above groups with a much greater rise in the oil group.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Hypolipidemic action of onion and garlic unsaturated oils in sucrose fed rats over a two-month periodCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1982
- Onion, Garlic, and Experimental AtherosclerosisJapanese Heart Journal, 1979
- Effects of chronic ethanol consumption on the rate of rat liver mitochondrial protein turnover and synthesisBiochemical Pharmacology, 1978
- Effect of essential oil of onion and garlic on experimental atherosclerosis in rabbitsAtherosclerosis, 1977
- Partial identification of the fibrinolytic activators in onionAtherosclerosis, 1975
- ONION AND GARLIC IN EXPERIMENTAL ATHEROSCLEROSISThe Lancet, 1975
- The Turnover of Cholesterol in Human Atherosclerotic ArteriesJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1974
- Lipid lowering effect of allicin (diallyl disulphide-oxide) on long term feeding to normal ratsCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1974
- ANIMAL REQUIREMENTS: BASIC AND OPTIMALAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1972
- The Antibacterial Principle of Allium sativum. III. Its Precursor and “Essential Oil of Garlic”1Journal of the American Chemical Society, 1945