Microvascular research
-
Microvascular research · Mar 2001
Hyperthermic pretreatment decreases microvascular protein leakage and attenuates hypotension in anaphylactic shock in rats.
Systemic anaphylaxis is a life-threatening allergic reaction and its pathologic conditions, such as edema, bronchospasm, and hypotension, have been attributed to release of vasoactive mediators. Heat shock protein (HSP) is known to play a protective role in living cells under various stresses. In these studies, we investigated the protective role of heat shock response in anaphylactic shock, focusing on changes of blood pressure (BP) and vascular permeability. ⋯ BP in the heated rats was significantly higher than BP in the nonheated rats from 4 to 15 min during anaphylactic shock (P < 0.001). Inducible HSP72 appeared overexpressed in heart, lung, and liver tissue in the heated rats tested by Western immunoblotting. The results indicate that reduction of increased protein leakage and attenuation of hypotension may result from induction of HSP by whole-body hyperthermia.