Abstract
The risk of cardiovascular disease drastically increases at the onset of menopause, in part, because of rise in blood cholesterol and unfavorable changes in lipid profile. This study was designed to investigate the dose-dependent effects of vitamin E supplementation on lipid parameters in ovariectomized (ovx) rats. Sixty 12-month-old female Sprague-Dawley rats were either sham-operated (sham; one group) or ovx (four groups). All rats were maintained on a semipurified caseinbased diet (AIN-93M; 75 IU vitamin E/kg of diet) for a period of 120 days. Thereafter, ovx rats were placed on one of four doses of vitamin E treatment (75, 300, 525, or 750 IU vitamin E/kg of diet), while the sham group was continued on 75 IU vitamin E/kg of diet for 100 days. Ovariectomy tended to increase (by 24%,
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