From Lab Hurdles to Hope: Pistacia vera L. Extract Tackles Oxidative Stress & Inflammation in Diabetic Rats

Our newly published study—“Efficacy of Pistacia vera L. ethanolic extract in modulating oxidative stress and inflammatory markers in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats”—is more than just numbers. It’s a story of perseverance, unexpected obstacles, and the quiet thrill of discovery.

Published in Biomedical Research

From Lab Hurdles to Hope: Pistacia vera L. Extract Tackles Oxidative Stress & Inflammation in Diabetic Rats
Like

Share this post

Choose a social network to share with, or copy the URL to share elsewhere

This is a representation of how your post may appear on social media. The actual post will vary between social networks

🔬 What We Found

  • Oral administration of the ethanolic fruit extract (PEE, 100 mg/kg/day) for 6 weeks in diabetic rats restored antioxidant defenses—including CAT, GPx, GSH, and SOD—nearly to normal levels. SpringerLink

  • At the same time, the extract significantly lowered markers of oxidative stress and inflammation: MDA, NO, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, and IL-10, and reduced hyperglycemia. SpringerLink

  • Histological evaluation of pancreatic β-cells revealed improved insulin secretion capacity after treatment—indicating real functional recovery, not just biochemical shifts. SpringerLink

These results support the potential of Pistacia vera as a natural therapeutic agent to mitigate oxidative stress and inflammation in diabetic conditions—and perhaps, with more research, pave the way toward supportive dietary or phytotherapeutic interventions.

 The Struggle Behind the Scenes

But arriving at these clean results was anything but smooth.

  • Diet preparation & dosing: Formulating the right ethanolic extract dose, ensuring stability and reproducibility, took many pilot experiments before we settled on 100 mg/kg/day.

  • Animal model challenges: Working with streptozotocin (STZ)-induced diabetic rats meant battling high mortality, variable glycemic responses, and physiological stress—we had to manage many trials with animals lost or excluded.

  • Biochemical and histological work: Running antioxidant assays (CAT, SOD, GPx, GSH), oxidative-stress markers (MDA, NO), and inflammatory cytokines—with tight controls, repeated measures, and long hours in the wet lab—tested both our technical skills and patience.

  • Uncertain data, many dead ends: Some early batches gave noisy or inconsistent data; some histology slides were unusable; we repeated whole experiments more than once. At times it felt endless.

But every failure taught us something—about extraction purity, animal handling, sampling timing, and even ambient lab temperature. And gradually, step by step, we refined the protocol.

 Why It Matters

This study shows how a common natural product—Pistacia vera—may offer antioxidant and anti-inflammatory benefits in diabetic pathology. For researchers like us, it reaffirms the value of exploring natural products: the work is hard, but the potential payoff—safe, accessible therapies—is worth the effort.

Reference

Ashry M., Khairallah F., Gadelmawla M. H. A., Atwa A., Darkazanl M., Gadel-Rab A. G., El-nwihy M. E., Zaghloul B. A., Salem A. M., El-Dahlan A. A., Abu Razza K. M., Saad A. M., Abd Elmogith H. E., Askar H. (2025). Efficacy of Pistacia vera L. ethanolic extract in modulating oxidative stress and inflammatory markers in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. Comparative Clinical Pathology.

Please sign in or register for FREE

If you are a registered user on Research Communities by Springer Nature, please sign in

Follow the Topic

Biomedical Research
Life Sciences > Health Sciences > Biomedical Research

Related Collections

With Collections, you can get published faster and increase your visibility.

Methods

Well-described, validated methods are the cornerstone of good clinical pathology investigations. Whether it is an in-lab machine with a large footprint, a hand-held “bedside” device or manual assay, it is critical to have as much information on the method as possible. This includes references from other labs performing assessments of the same analyte, even with different methods. This collection is our answer to finding this information. Where articles have clear and transparent descriptions of the assays which were used in their studies, or where the article is a report on the validation of a system or assay it will be housed here. This is also an open collection, so we invite authors to contact us with a topic or submit an article relevant to our journal scope! This collection was curated by Editor in Chief from articles that also appear in the journal's issues. You can find more information about the editors here: https://www.springer.com/journal/580/editors

Publishing Model: Hybrid

Deadline: Ongoing

Reviews

This collection houses reviews on topics central to the theme of Comparative Clinical Pathology. As our new Editorial Board produces reviews on topics relevant to their specialist areas, they will be held in this collection. Indeed, whether it is an overview of the toxic effects of a compound on clinical chemistry and haematology in various species, or an assessment of the changing landscape of how clinical pathology is used in veterinary practice, research or regulatory environments, the reviews we think will be of most interest to our readers will be housed here. This is also an open collection, so we invite authors to contact us with a topic or submit a review relevant to our journal scope! This collection was curated by Editor in Chief from articles that also appear in the journal's issues. You can find more information about the editors here: https://www.springer.com/journal/580/editors

Publishing Model: Hybrid

Deadline: Ongoing