Protective Effects of Dietary Vitamin D3, Turmeric Powder, and Their Combination against Gasoline Intoxication in Rats
Gulfira A. Yestemirova, Zura B. Yessimsiitova, Michael Danilenko

TL;DR
This study shows that vitamin D3 can reduce the harmful effects of gasoline fumes in rats, more effectively than turmeric powder or their combination.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that vitamin D3 alone is more protective than turmeric or their combination against gasoline toxicity in rats.
Findings
Vitamin D3 supplementation partially prevented weight loss in rats exposed to gasoline fumes.
Vitamin D3 improved lung, liver, kidney, and spleen damage caused by gasoline fumes.
Vitamin D3 was more effective than turmeric or their combination in reducing gasoline-induced toxicity.
Abstract
The inhalation of gasoline vapors (GV) is associated with developing various pathologies. Particularly, oil refinery and gas station workers are at a greater risk of developing lung cancer, kidney cancer, bladder cancer, and hematological disorders, including acute myeloid leukemia. Therefore, preventing the harmful effects of GV and alleviating their consequences appear to be important and timely issues. In this study, we investigated the potential of vitamin D3, turmeric powder, and their combination to ameliorate the toxicity of gasoline fumes in rats. Separate groups of animals fed with a standard rodent diet, with or without the supplementation of vitamin D3 (750 IU/kg body weight) and/or turmeric powder (0.5%, w/w, in food), were untreated or treated with GV (11.5 ± 1.3 cm3/h/m3/day) for 30, 60, or 90 days. Changes in the body weight were monitored weekly. Histological,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCurcumin's Biomedical Applications · Vitamin C and Antioxidants Research · Air Quality and Health Impacts
