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Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests

AIMS: To provide common Organic Chemistry/Polymer Science thermoset free-radical crosslinking Sciences for Medical understanding and also present research findings for several common vitamins/antioxidants with a new class of drugs known as free-radical inhibitors. STUDY DESIGN: Peroxide/Fenton trans...

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Autor principal: Petersen, Richard C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4404645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25909053
http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/IRJPAC/2012/2104
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author Petersen, Richard C.
author_facet Petersen, Richard C.
author_sort Petersen, Richard C.
collection PubMed
description AIMS: To provide common Organic Chemistry/Polymer Science thermoset free-radical crosslinking Sciences for Medical understanding and also present research findings for several common vitamins/antioxidants with a new class of drugs known as free-radical inhibitors. STUDY DESIGN: Peroxide/Fenton transition-metal redox couples that generate free radicals were combined with unsaturated lipid oils to demonstrate thermoset-polymer chain growth by crosslinking with the α-β-unsaturated aldehyde acrolein into rubbery/adhesive solids. Further, Vitamin A and beta carotene were similarly studied for crosslink pathological potential. Also, free-radical inhibitor hydroquinone was compared for antioxidant capability with Vitamin E. PLACE AND DURATION OF STUDY: Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Department of Biomaterials, University of Alabama at Birmingham, between June 2005 and August 2012. METHODOLOGY: Observations were recorded for Fenton free-radical crosslinking of unsaturated lipids and vitamin A/beta carotene by photography further with weight measurements and percent-shrinkage testing directly related to covalent crosslinking of unsaturated lipids recorded over time with different concentrations of acrolein. Also, hydroquinone and vitamin E were compared at concentrations from 0.0–7.3wt% as antioxidants for reductions in percent-shrinkage measurements, n = 5. RESULTS: Unsaturated lipid oils responded to Fenton thermoset-polymer reactive secondary sequence reactions only by acrolein with crosslinking into rubbery-type solids and different non-solid gluey products. Further, molecular oxygen crosslinking was demonstrated with lipid peroxidation and acrolein at specially identified margins. By peroxide/Fenton free-radical testing, both vitamin A and beta-carotene demonstrated possible pathology chemistry for chain-growth crosslinking. During lipid/acrolein testing over a 50 hour time period at 7.3wt% antioxidants, hydroquinone significantly reduced percent shrinkage greatly compared to the standard antioxidant vitamin E, %shrinkage at 11.6 ±1.3 for hydroquinone and 27.8 ±2.2 for vitamin E, P = .001. CONCLUSION: Free radicals crosslinked unsaturated lipid fatty acids into thermoset polymers through Fenton reactions when combined with acrolein. Further, hydroquinone was a superior antioxidant to vitamin E.
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spelling pubmed-44046452015-04-21 Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests Petersen, Richard C. Int Res J Pure Appl Chem Article AIMS: To provide common Organic Chemistry/Polymer Science thermoset free-radical crosslinking Sciences for Medical understanding and also present research findings for several common vitamins/antioxidants with a new class of drugs known as free-radical inhibitors. STUDY DESIGN: Peroxide/Fenton transition-metal redox couples that generate free radicals were combined with unsaturated lipid oils to demonstrate thermoset-polymer chain growth by crosslinking with the α-β-unsaturated aldehyde acrolein into rubbery/adhesive solids. Further, Vitamin A and beta carotene were similarly studied for crosslink pathological potential. Also, free-radical inhibitor hydroquinone was compared for antioxidant capability with Vitamin E. PLACE AND DURATION OF STUDY: Department of Materials Science and Engineering and Department of Biomaterials, University of Alabama at Birmingham, between June 2005 and August 2012. METHODOLOGY: Observations were recorded for Fenton free-radical crosslinking of unsaturated lipids and vitamin A/beta carotene by photography further with weight measurements and percent-shrinkage testing directly related to covalent crosslinking of unsaturated lipids recorded over time with different concentrations of acrolein. Also, hydroquinone and vitamin E were compared at concentrations from 0.0–7.3wt% as antioxidants for reductions in percent-shrinkage measurements, n = 5. RESULTS: Unsaturated lipid oils responded to Fenton thermoset-polymer reactive secondary sequence reactions only by acrolein with crosslinking into rubbery-type solids and different non-solid gluey products. Further, molecular oxygen crosslinking was demonstrated with lipid peroxidation and acrolein at specially identified margins. By peroxide/Fenton free-radical testing, both vitamin A and beta-carotene demonstrated possible pathology chemistry for chain-growth crosslinking. During lipid/acrolein testing over a 50 hour time period at 7.3wt% antioxidants, hydroquinone significantly reduced percent shrinkage greatly compared to the standard antioxidant vitamin E, %shrinkage at 11.6 ±1.3 for hydroquinone and 27.8 ±2.2 for vitamin E, P = .001. CONCLUSION: Free radicals crosslinked unsaturated lipid fatty acids into thermoset polymers through Fenton reactions when combined with acrolein. Further, hydroquinone was a superior antioxidant to vitamin E. 2012 /pmc/articles/PMC4404645/ /pubmed/25909053 http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/IRJPAC/2012/2104 Text en © 2012 Petersen This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Petersen, Richard C.
Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title_full Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title_fullStr Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title_full_unstemmed Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title_short Reactive Secondary Sequence Oxidative Pathology Polymer Model and Antioxidant Tests
title_sort reactive secondary sequence oxidative pathology polymer model and antioxidant tests
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4404645/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25909053
http://dx.doi.org/10.9734/IRJPAC/2012/2104
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