Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cold preservation and reperfusion of liver during transplantation are necessary steps in the procedure but which are also associated with damage to the organ. One aspect of this damage is thought to concern up-regulation of inflammatory markers, such as the adhesion molecule intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) on target cells in the liver. This aids sequestration of activated leucocytes, which promote inflammation, by a complex sequence of events, including free radical mediated damage. We have studied changes in ICAM-1 in rat liver as a consequence of cold preservation for various times, and also after warm reperfusion during isolated liver perfusion. We have also investigated the effects of the free radical scavenging agent (reduced glutathione-GSH) on the modulation of ICAM-1 expression after cold hypoxia and reperfusion. Livers were subjected to various regimes of cold preservation and reperfusion. Liver biopsies were taken at three time points (initial baseline on liver exposure; after organ flushing and post-storage at 0, 8, 16, and 24h cold hypoxia in University of Wisconsin solution; in the same livers after 1h warm reperfusion). The tissues were processed for frozen biopsy work, and frozen sections were stained using immunohistochemical methods, for blinded scoring by an independent observer. Positive controls were obtained by exposure to endotoxin lipopolysaccharide before liver flushing. ICAM-1 expression was low in control livers (0.33+/-0.21), and increased to near maximal (2.83+/-0.17) after endotoxin exposure. ICAM-1 expression increased progressively with cold preservation, reaching values of 1.17+/-0.31 and 1.83+/-0.31 after 16 and 24h, respectively (P<0.05 and 0.02 versus controls). Warm reperfusuion increased ICAM-1 expression in all flushed groups and with longer cold preservation was close to maximal (2.67+/-0.21 after 16h and 2.98+/-0.02 after 24h; P<0.001 in both cases). Addition of the free radical scavenger GSH prevented up-regulation of ICAM-1 in livers reperfused after flushing and cold storage for up to 8h; beyond this time, ICAM-1 expression still increased, such that by 24h cold preservation and reperfusion absence (2.98+/-0.02) or presence (2.67+/-0.21) made no difference. We conclude that liver ICAM-1 expression is demonstrably increased by progressive cold preservation and reperfusion, and is only marginally affected by addition of GSH during reperfusion. The model can be used to investigate other agents which might be more successful in preventing post-storage inflammatory damage.
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PMID:Hepatic cold hypoxia and oxidative stress: implications for ICAM-1 expression and modulation by glutathione during experimental isolated liver preservation. 1458 Aug 50

The aim in this study was to investigate if our new experimental model for stroke therapy, flushing the ischemic territory with saline prior to reperfusion, could reduce overexpression of inflammatory mediators during reperfusion. Stroke in Sprague-Dawley rats (n=24) was induced by a 2-h middle cerebral artery occlusion using a novel intraluminal hollow filament. Prior to reperfusion, 12 of the ischemic rats received 6 ml isotonic saline at 37 degrees C infused into the ischemic area through the filament. Expression of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) mRNA was analyzed by real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (real-time RT-PCR). A significant overexpression (9-26 fold) of the genes encoding TNF-alpha, IL-1beta and ICAM-1 in ischemic rats was found during early reperfusion without flushing at 6 and 12 h. This increase was significantly reduced at both 6 and 12 h post-reperfusion as a result of saline flushing.
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PMID:Reduced inflammatory mediator expression by pre-reperfusion infusion into ischemic territory in rats: a real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis. 1466 9