• Shock · Dec 1998

    Post-hemorrhagic shock mesenteric lymph is cytotoxic to endothelial cells and activates neutrophils.

    • J S Upperman, E A Deitch, W Guo, Q Lu, and D Xu.
    • Department of Surgery, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, New Jersey Medical School, Newark 07103, USA.
    • Shock. 1998 Dec 1;10(6):407-14.

    AbstractThe goal of these experiments was to test the hypothesis that after a nonlethal episode of hemorrhagic shock, factors carried in the mesenteric lymph would promote endothelial cell injury and activate neutrophils to a greater extent than portal vein plasma. Catheters were placed in the efferent lymphatic duct draining the mesenteric lymph node complex, after which male rats were subjected to sham or actual shock (30 mmHg for 90 min), and lymph was collected. Portal vein plasma was collected from the sham-shock and shocked rats at 6 h post-shock or sham-shock. When the effect of lymph or portal blood plasma was tested on endothelial cell (HUVEC) monolayer permeability, it was found that post-shock lymph, but not post-shock portal vein plasma, increased HUVEC permeability to both 10 kDa and 40 kDa permeability probes. Subsequent experiments documented that only post-shock lymph was cytotoxic to endothelial cells as manifest both by decreased trypan blue dye exclusion and the increased release of Chromium-51 from chromium-loaded endothelial cells. Furthermore post-shock lymph induced a greater increase in neutrophil superoxide formation than pre-shock lymph, pre-shock, or post-shock portal vein plasma. Lastly, neutrophil-mediated endothelial cell injury was potentiated by the presence of post-shock lymph, and the magnitude of HUVEC injury was greater in endothelial cells incubated with post-shock lymph plus neutrophils than in monolayers incubated with post-shock lymph or neutrophils alone. These results suggest that post-shock lymph is cytotoxic to endothelial cells and activates neutrophils. Since the lung is the first organ that is exposed to mesenteric lymph, lung injury after hemorrhagic shock may be mediated by factors contained in mesenteric lymph.

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