• Shock · May 2006

    Lymph from a primate baboon trauma hemorrhagic shock model activates human neutrophils.

    • Edwin A Deitch, Eleanora Feketeova, John M Adams, Raquel M Forsythe, Da-Zhong Xu, Kiyoshi Itagaki, and Heinz Redl.
    • Department of Surgery, UMDNJ-New Jersey Medical School, Newark, NJ 07103, USA. edietch@UMDNJ.edu
    • Shock. 2006 May 1;25(5):460-3.

    AbstractWe have reported that toxic factors in intestinal lymph are responsible for acute lung injury and bone marrow suppression and that they contribute to a systemic inflammatory state based on studies in rodent models of trauma-hemorrhagic shock. Rodent models may not completely reflect the responses of injured patients. Thus, it is important to confirm these findings in primates before applying them to injured human patients with trauma. Thus, we have recently established baboon trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) and trauma-sham shock (T/SS) models that showed that gut-derived factors carried in the lymph potentiates lung injury and causes human endothelial dysfunction and suppresses human bone marrow progenitor cell growth. Here, we further investigated the effects of these primate lymph samples on human neutrophils. We hypothesized that toxic factors in baboon lymph may prime and/or activate human polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) leading to overproduction of superoxide, thereby contributing to the development of adult respiratory distress syndrome and multiple organ failure. To this effect, we have examined the priming effect of baboon T/HS and T/SS lymph on PMN respiratory burst and expression of adhesion molecule in human neutrophils. The results of these studies indicate that PMN treated with baboon T/HS lymph showed significantly induced respiratory burst responses compared with PMN treated with T/SS lymph or medium when phorbol myristate acetate PMA was applied after lymph pretreatment. Secondly, we found that the expression of CD11b adhesion molecule was increased by incubation with T/HS lymph. These results suggest that baboon lymph from T/HS models can increase respiratory burst and adhesion molecule expression in human PMN, thereby potentially contributing to PMN-mediated organ injury.

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