Naringenin improves testicular reproductive function in rats with testicular ischemia-reperfusion injury
Si-Ming Wei, Yu-Min Huang

TL;DR
Naringenin, a plant compound, helps protect rat testicles from damage caused by ischemia-reperfusion injury by reducing oxidative stress.
Contribution
This study demonstrates naringenin's protective effect on testicular function by reducing oxidative stress markers in rats.
Findings
Naringenin reduced NADPH oxidase activity in testicular tissue.
Malondialdehyde levels decreased after naringenin treatment.
Testicular reproductive function improved with naringenin administration.
Abstract
The significant change during testicular ischemia-reperfusion is the generation of high levels of reactive oxygen species, which trigger impairment of spermatogenic cells. Naringenin, a plant-derived flavonoid, can alleviate oxidative stress. The current study was conducted to examine the possible protective ability of naringenin on testicular ischemia-reperfusion injury. Three groups of male rats were created: group 1 (sham operation), group 2 (left testicular ischemia-reperfusion), and group 3 (treatment with naringenin after left testicular ischemia-reperfusion). Testicular ischemia of rats was induced by 2 hours of left testicular torsion, and subsequently testicular detorsion was performed for reperfusion. Rat testes of three groups were taken to analyze nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase activity, which contributes to the production of reactive oxygen…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTesticular diseases and treatments · Sperm and Testicular Function · Male Reproductive Health Studies
