Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

(TNF alpha)-induced sequestration of neutrophils (PMN) in lungs and of the resultant PMN-dependent pulmonary edema. Guinea pig lungs perfused with Ringers-albumin were challenged with TNF alpha (1,000 U/ml) for 90 min, followed by addition of fresh perfusate containing 2 x 10(7) human PMN. TNF alpha challenge caused sequestration of PMN in the pulmonary vascular bed as indicated by a threefold increase in lung tissue myeloperoxidase activity (MPO). The activation of the sequestered PMN with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA; 5 x 10(-9) M) produced threefold increases in pulmonary artery (Ppa) and pulmonary capillary hydrostatic (Pcap) pressures, and twofold increases in lung wet-to-dry weight (W/D) ratio and capillary filtration coefficient (Kf,c) over baseline. TNF alpha prestimulation was required for these responses since activation of PMN with PMA in control lungs produced smaller increases in Ppa and Pcap (P less than 0.01) and did not change the W/D and Kf,c. TNF alpha prestimulation also induced the expression of intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM-1) on pulmonary vascular endothelial cells. Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to the neutrophil CD18 integrin (beta-chain of CD11/CD18 complex) (mAb IB4) and to its endothelial cell ligand ICAM-1 (mAb RR1/1) were used to examine the role of PMN adhesion in the TNF alpha-induced responses. Pretreatment of PMN with mAb IB4 prevented PMN uptake and increases in Ppa, Pcap, Kf,c, and W/D ratio. Addition of mAb RR1/1 to the perfusate reduced PMN uptake by 58%, and prevented the increases in Ppa, Pcap, Kf,c, and W/D ratio, as with mAb IB4. The findings indicate that TNF alpha prestimulation of lungs mediates PMN uptake and that this requires the expression of ICAM-1 and its interaction with CD18 integrin on PMN. The activation of PMN sequestered by ICAM-1-dependent mechanism contributes to the development of pulmonary vascular injury and edema.
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor mediates experimental pulmonary edema by ICAM-1 and CD18-dependent mechanisms. 134 98

Monoclonal antibody against human tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF MAb) prevents death induced by intravenous gram-negative bacteria or lipopolysaccharide (LPS) in primates. Although these studies have demonstrated that TNF plays a prominent role in the development of lethal septic shock, exploration of dose-response relationships and possible mechanisms of protection have been limited. We addressed these questions in a series of experiments conducted in E. coli-challenged pigs. First, we determined that TNF MAb neutralized the cytotoxic activity found in septic pig plasma and in culture media from pig monocytes incubated with LPS. Second, we demonstrated that pretreatment with TNF MAb promotes survival, in a dose-dependent fashion, in an otherwise lethal E. coli bacteremic pig model. The results of the survival study highly correlate (r = 0.96, P < 0.01) the presence of TNF in the circulation with mortality. In an additional series of physiologic monitoring experiments designed to delineate possible mechanisms of protection, the authors demonstrate that TNF MAb pretreatment abrogates the prolonged leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and microvascular leakiness resulting from intravenous bacterial challenge and maintains arterial blood pressure while diminishing pulmonary edema. These findings may provide a mechanism whereby neutralization of TNF systemically affords protection against the lethal sequelae of bacteremia.
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PMID:Efficacy of monoclonal antibody against human recombinant tumor necrosis factor in E. coli-challenged swine. 144 53

TNF is a major mediator in the pathogenesis of endotoxic shock, and its inhibition has a protective effect in various animal models of sepsis or endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) toxicity. LPS treatment also induces an oxidative damage mediated by increased production of reactive oxygen intermediates. N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) is an antioxidant and a precursor of the synthesis of glutathione (GSH) and was reported to protect against LPS toxicity and LPS-induced pulmonary edema. In this study we investigated the effect of NAC on TNF production and LPS lethality in mice. The results indicated that oral administration of NAC protects against LPS toxicity and inhibits the increase in serum TNF levels in LPS-treated mice. The inhibition was not confined to the released form of TNF, since NAC also inhibited LPS-induced spleen-associated TNF. On the other hand, the inhibitor of GSH synthesis, DL-buthionine-(SR)-sulfoximine (BSO), had the opposite effect of potentiating LPS-induced TNF production, and this was associated with a decrease in liver GSH levels. Repletion of liver GSH with NAC reversed this effect. NAC was also active in inhibiting TNF production and hepatotoxicity in mice treated with LPS in association with a sensitizing dose of Actinomycin D. These data indicate that GSH can be an endogenous modulator of TNF production in vivo. On the other hand, NAC pretreatment did not inhibit other effects of LPS, particularly induction of serum IL-6, spleen IL-1 alpha, and corticosterone, in the same experimental model, suggesting that the observed effect could be specific for TNF.
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PMID:N-acetylcysteine and glutathione as inhibitors of tumor necrosis factor production. 154 68

Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a glycerophospholipid known for its unusual potent vasoactive and proinflammatory activities. The present study examined whether PAF might serve as a priming factor in endotoxin-induced tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha) synthesis, cardiovascular shock, and lung injury in anesthetized rats. Intravenous infusion of PAF (1 pmol/kg/min for 60 minutes, n = 5) alone or endotoxin (0.1 micrograms/kg i.v. bolus, n = 5) failed to alter blood pressure, serum TNF alpha and thromboxane B2, platelet and leukocyte count, and hematocrit, nor was lung histology, myeloperoxidase activity, and water content changed. In contrast, the combined administration of PAF and endotoxin markedly elevated serum TNF alpha (1,359 +/- 362 pg/ml, n = 5, p less than 0.01) and thromboxane B2 (43 +/- 5 pg/100 microliters, n = 8, p less than 0.01) along with hypotension, hemoconcentration, leukopenia, and thrombocytopenia. Most notably, the combined regimen caused neutrophil aggregation, adhesion, and accumulation into the lung parenchyma along with platelet-fibrin deposits in postcapillary venules, pulmonary edema, and increased lung myeloperoxidase activity. The role of PAF in this process was confirmed by 1) the prevention of the priming effect by pretreatment with the PAF antagonist BN 50739 (n = 5), and 2) the failure of lyso-PAF, the cardinal nonactive PAF-metabolite, to prime for endotoxin-induced production of TNF alpha (n = 4). These data suggest that PAF could serve as a key mediator in priming for endotoxin-induced tissue injury, especially the typical pulmonary pathophysiology of adult respiratory distress syndrome, a severe pathological outcome of septic shock, burns, and multiple organ injury.
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PMID:Priming by platelet-activating factor of endotoxin-induced lung injury and cardiovascular shock. 164 75

After injection of live E. coli, TNF in blood and culture supernatant of the isolated macrophages from the lung, liver, and spleen, were measured, and possible relationship between their TNF levels and lung edema was examined. The blood TNF activity increased significantly until 3h after the injection in the lethal group (p less than 0.01). The TNF activity of alveolar macrophages showed no changes even in the lethal group. The TNF activities of the liver and spleen macrophages decreased significantly in the lethal group (p less than 0.01-0.05), while those in the sublethal group that didn't induce lung edema and showed no significant decrease. The blood leukocyte count decreased until 6h after the injection in the both sublethal and lethal groups, but there was no significant difference between the two groups. The lung weight difference of the lethal group was significantly higher than that in the control group 12h after injection (p less than 0.05). Therefore, the elevated blood TNF activities in our study may be not elicited from alveolar macrophages but mainly from liver and spleen macrophages. There may be a relationship between the lung edema and the elevated blood TNF activity in the lethal groups.
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PMID:[Analysis of mechanism of lung edema in E. coli injected septic rat model--in relation to tumor necrosis factor (TNF) produced from liver, spleen, and alveolar macrophages]. 194 45

A 73-year-old woman with ureteral cancer and multiple systemic metastasis was admitted complaining of dyspnea on exertion after administration of recombinant human tumor necrosis factor (rH-TNF). On chest examination, coarse crackles were heard during inspiration throughout the lungs. Chest roentgenogram revealed a ground glass infiltration, an air bronchogram in the right lung field and an ill-defined right pulmonary artery. Her symptom and chest roentgenological finding improved and coarse crackles were not heard after discontinuation of rH-TNF. Neutrophils and lymphocytes of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid increased and transbronchial lung biopsy specimens showed slight thickening of alveolar septa with infiltration of inflammatory cells. The pulmonary edema was thought to be caused by rH-TNF which induces adherence of neutrophils to endothelium and stimulates them to increase lysosomal enzyme release and oxygen radical production. As a results, it is thought pulmonary permeability might be increased.
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PMID:[Ureteral cancer resembling pulmonary edema induced by recombinant human tumor necrosis factor]. 203 98

Cytokines are recognized as critical early mediators of organ injury. We attempted to determine whether or not severe hepatic ischemia/reperfusion injury results in tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) release with subsequent local and systemic tissue injury. After 90 min of lobar hepatic ischemia, TNF was measurable during the reperfusion period in the plasma of all 14 experimental animals, with levels peaking between 9 and 352 pg/ml. Endotoxin was undetectable in the plasma of these animals. Pulmonary injury, as evidenced by a neutrophilic infiltrate, edema and intra-alveolar hemorrhage developed after hepatic reperfusion. The neutrophilic infiltrate was quantitated using a myeloperoxidase (MPO) assay; this demonstrated a significant increase in MPO after only 1 h of reperfusion. Anti-TNF antiserum pretreatment significantly reduced the pulmonary MPO after hepatic reperfusion. After a 12-h reperfusion period, there was histologic evidence of intra-alveolar hemorrhage and pulmonary edema. Morphometric assessment showed that pretreatment with anti-TNF antiserum was able to completely inhibit the development of pulmonary edema. Liver injury was quantitated by measuring serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase which showed peaks at 3 and 24 h. Anti-TNF antiserum pretreatment was able to significantly reduce both of these peak elevations. These data show that hepatic ischemia/reperfusion results in TNF production, and that this TNF is intimately associated with pulmonary and hepatic injury.
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PMID:Role of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in the pathophysiologic alterations after hepatic ischemia/reperfusion injury in the rat. 216 33

The large mass of fixed macrophages resident in the liver make it a potentially rich source of cytokines. We have previously demonstrated that an isolated and severe ischemia/reperfusion injury to the liver results in cytokine release, specifically tumor necrosis factor alpha, and that TNF is then involved in the development of pulmonary pathology. This study was designed to determine the kinetics of TNF release following varying periods of hepatic ischemia and to further investigate the acute lung injury that follows. Suprahepatic blood samples were obtained at serial time points following a 45-, 60-, 75-, or 90-min ischemic insult to a segment of the rat liver with subsequent reperfusion. Using a bioassay based on the WEHI 164 cell line, plasma TNF levels were measured in all experimental animals; sham-operated control animals had undetectable levels. Changes in pulmonary capillary permeability were then measured using a standard 125I-labeled albumin washout technique following a 90-min ischemic insult with subsequent reperfusion. A significant increase in the mean permeability index was observed 9 to 12 hr following hepatic reperfusion (.601 +/- 102 as compared with .114 +/- .085 in sham-operated controls, P less than 0.005). Animals treated with anti-TNF antiserum prior to the induction of hepatic ischemia had a significantly reduced pulmonary capillary leak compared to animals pretreated with rabbit serum without TNF-blocking properties (.184 +/- .029 versus .694 +/- 052 for the control serum, P less than 0.005). TNF release follows both moderate and severe ischemic injury to the liver and the results reported here implicate TNF as an important mediator of increased pulmonary capillary permeability. These experiments confirm previous histologic studies that demonstrated pulmonary edema and intra-alveolar hemorrhage following hepatic ischemia/reperfusion, with subsequent blockade of the histologic injury by pretreatment with anti-TNF antiserum.
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PMID:The production of tumor necrosis factor alpha and the development of a pulmonary capillary injury following hepatic ischemia/reperfusion. 230 55

Tracheal insufflation of tumor necrosis factor (TNF; 5 micrograms or 1.2 x 10(5) U) markedly enhanced the survival of adult rats exposed to 100% O2: 12 of 17 rats (71%) survived for greater than 11 days, whereas 30 of 30 control (Hanks' balanced salt solution) insufflated rats (100%) died within 3 days of O2 exposure. Insufflation of gamma-interferon (5 micrograms) or intraperitoneal injection of up to 40 micrograms TNF did not afford any protection. At 55 h after O2 exposure, TNF-insufflated rats showed less pulmonary edema, as determined by the extravascular lung water content-to-bloodless lung dry weigh ratio and less alveolar capillary leak as determined by the protein content in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, than control insufflated rats similarly exposed. This protection against O2 toxicity by TNF insufflation was associated with increased lung superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase activities. The enhancement of lung antioxidant enzyme activities was noted at 55 h of O2 exposure, when control animals began to die of O2 toxicity. This temporal relationship suggests that TNF-induced increase in antioxidant enzyme activities contributes, at least in part, to the observed protection.
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PMID:Tracheal insufflation of tumor necrosis factor protects rats against oxygen toxicity. 234 45

In a prospective study, 22 patients with prolonged chest pain were monitored by serial serum tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF; cachectin) measurements. In five patients serum TNF markedly increased, peaking at greater than 145 ng l-1; all these patients had large infarcts complicated by hypotension, pulmonary oedema and/or arrhythmia. Two of these patients died. In contrast, TNF levels were either normal or only slightly raised in patients with small or uncomplicated infarcts and in patients with prolonged angina without evidence of infarction. The results show that extensive myocardial infarction induces the release of the monocyte/macrophage-derived polypeptide hormone TNF into circulation. This finding may be clinically relevant with respect to systemic metabolic consequences of myocardial infarction.
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PMID:Circulating tumour necrosis factor-alpha (cachectin) in myocardial infarction. 273 71


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