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Department of Physiology, University of Bonn, 53115 Bonn, Germany
Division for General and Surgical Intensive Care Medicine, University of Innsbruck, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria
The following is the abstract of the article discussed in the subsequent letter:
Steudel, Wolfgang, Hans-Joachim Krämer,
Daniela Degner, Simone Rosseau, Hartwig Schütte, Dieter Walmrath,
and Werner Seeger. Endotoxin priming of thromboxane-related
vasoconstrictor responses in perfused rabbit lungs. J. Appl.
Physiol. 83(1): 18-24, 1997.
In prior studies of perfused
lungs, endotoxin priming markedly enhanced thromboxane (Tx) generation
and Tx-mediated vasoconstriction in response to secondarily applied
bacterial exotoxins. The present study addressed this aspect in more
detail by employing precursor and intermediates of prostanoid synthesis
and performing functional testing of vasoreactivity and measurement of
product formation. Rabbit lungs were buffer perfused in the absence or
presence of 10 ng/ml endotoxin. Repetitive intravascular bolus
applications of free arachidonic acid provoked constant pulmonary
arterial pressor responses and constant release reactions of
TxA2 and prostaglandin (PG) I2 in nonprimed
lungs. Within 60-90 min of endotoxin recirculation, which provoked
progressive liberation of tumor necrosis factor-
but did not effect
any hemodynamic changes by itself, both pressor responses and
prostanoid release markedly increased, and both events were fully
blocked by cyclooxygenase (Cyclo) inhibition with acetylsalicylic acid
(ASA). The unstable intermediate PGG2 provoked moderate
pressor responses, again enhanced by preceding endotoxin priming and
fully suppressed by ASA. Vasoconstriction also occurred in response to
the direct Cyclo product PGH2, again amplified after
endotoxin pretreatment, together with markedly enhanced liberation of
TxA2 and PGI2. In the presence of ASA, the
priming-related increase in pressor responses and the prostanoid formation were blocked, but baseline vasoconstrictor responses corresponding to those in nonprimed lungs were maintained. Pressor responses to the stable Tx analog U-46619 were not significantly increased by endotoxin pretreatment, but some generation of
TxA2 and PGI2 was also noted under these
conditions. We conclude that endotoxin priming exerts profound effects
on the lung vascular prostanoid metabolism, increasing the readiness to
react with Tx-mediated vasoconstrictor responses to various stimuli,
suggesting that enhanced Cyclo activity is an important underlying
event.
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