» Articles » PMID: 27801410

[The Ultrastructure of Leydig Cells Under the Influence of Drinking Mineral Water and Electromagnetic Radiation Under the Stress Conditions in the Rats]

Overview
Date 2016 Nov 2
PMID 27801410
Citations 2
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The objective of the present study was elucidate the peculiar features of low-intensity electromagnetic radiation (LI EMR) and mineral water (MW) on the ultrastructure of rat Leydig cells under conditions of immobilization stress. The experiments were carried out on outbred male rats with the use of electron microscopy. It has been demonstrated that the prophylactic consumption of drinking sulfate-containing mineral water and the application low-intensity electromagnetic radiation (with the flow power density of 1 mcW/cm2 and frequency around 1,000 Hz) or the combination of these two modalities under conditions of immobilization stress reduced the degree of ultrastructural derangement in the rat Leydig cells and stimulated the development of regenerative processes. In the cases of the single-factor impact, drinking mineral water exerted more pronounced action than low-intensity electromagnetic radiation on mitochondrial regeneration. In case of the simultaneous application of the two factors their protective action on the Leydig cells was much more conspicuous than that of either of them applied alone. It is concluded that drinking sulfate-containing mineral water in combination with the application of low-intensity electromagnetic radiation enhances resistance of the rat Leydig cells to stress.

Citing Articles

Effects of Bushen Yiyuan recipe on testosterone synthesis in Leydig cells of rats with exercise-induced low serum testosterone levels.

Wang Y, Peng X, Zhou Z, Tang C, Liu W Pharm Biol. 2022; 60(1):1670-1678.

PMID: 36063102 PMC: 9448381. DOI: 10.1080/13880209.2022.2110126.


Effectiveness of low level laser therapy for treating male infertility.

Moskvin S, Apolikhin O Biomedicine (Taipei). 2018; 8(2):7.

PMID: 29806585 PMC: 5992952. DOI: 10.1051/bmdcn/2018080207.