TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of Transplanted Bone Marrow on Spleen of Irradiated Pregnant Rats and Their Fetuses
AU - Rabou, Mervat Ahmed Abd
AU - Ali, Ali Hassan A.
AU - El Baz, Kamal R.
AU - Alqahtani, Mohammed Saad
AU - Al-Otaibi, Aljohara M.
AU - Alfassam, Haifa E.
AU - Ibrahim, Heba F.
AU - Abo-Ouf, Amany M.
AU - Aboelsoud, Heba Abdelnaser
AU - Ahmed, Mehad A.
AU - Gamil, Sahar
AU - Alturaiki, Ibrahim M.Ibrahim
AU - Alanazi, Mohammed Mudhhi Awadh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Mervat Ahmed Abd Rabou et al.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Background and Objective: Prenatal ionizing radiation exposure may hinder fetal and embryonic growth depending on the dose and gestational age. The current study’s objective was to discover how bone marrow transplants affected the spleens of pregnant rats that had been subjected to γ (Gamma) radiation. Materials and Methods: Sixty rats that were pregnant were separated into five different groups, each with 6 females. The pregnant rats in the second Group were exposed to 2Gy of γ-rays. Group III; pregnant rats subjected to 2Gy of γ-rays, followed by an intraperitoneal injection of newly prepared bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The fifth Group were exposed to 2Gy γ-rays and received 1 dosage of BMT an hour later. Spleen samples from the pregnant rats as well as their fetuses were taken for histological and histochemical analyses. Results: Gamma rays damaged the splenic tissue of women and their fetuses on days 7 or 14 of pregnancy in a variety of histological and histochemical ways, although bone marrow transplantation significantly reduced the damage. Treated mothers with bone marrow post-radiation showed a noticeable recovery in spleen of their fetuses. Improved spleen architecture was accompanied by appearance of normal content of collagen, polysaccharides and total protein in the fetal spleen tissue especially on day 7 of gestation. Conclusion: Bone marrow transplantation can lessen the damage caused by gamma radiation.
AB - Background and Objective: Prenatal ionizing radiation exposure may hinder fetal and embryonic growth depending on the dose and gestational age. The current study’s objective was to discover how bone marrow transplants affected the spleens of pregnant rats that had been subjected to γ (Gamma) radiation. Materials and Methods: Sixty rats that were pregnant were separated into five different groups, each with 6 females. The pregnant rats in the second Group were exposed to 2Gy of γ-rays. Group III; pregnant rats subjected to 2Gy of γ-rays, followed by an intraperitoneal injection of newly prepared bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The fifth Group were exposed to 2Gy γ-rays and received 1 dosage of BMT an hour later. Spleen samples from the pregnant rats as well as their fetuses were taken for histological and histochemical analyses. Results: Gamma rays damaged the splenic tissue of women and their fetuses on days 7 or 14 of pregnancy in a variety of histological and histochemical ways, although bone marrow transplantation significantly reduced the damage. Treated mothers with bone marrow post-radiation showed a noticeable recovery in spleen of their fetuses. Improved spleen architecture was accompanied by appearance of normal content of collagen, polysaccharides and total protein in the fetal spleen tissue especially on day 7 of gestation. Conclusion: Bone marrow transplantation can lessen the damage caused by gamma radiation.
KW - bone marrow transplantation
KW - fetuses
KW - ionizing radiation
KW - pregnant rats
KW - Spleen
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85194841941&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3923/pjbs.2024.168.181
DO - 10.3923/pjbs.2024.168.181
M3 - Article
C2 - 38812108
AN - SCOPUS:85194841941
SN - 1028-8880
VL - 27
SP - 168
EP - 181
JO - Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences
JF - Pakistan Journal of Biological Sciences
IS - 4
ER -