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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (sepsis)
59,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The response to injury is dependent on several factors, including the type and extent of the injury, genetics, and the environment. In the present study, the genetic contribution to sepsis was evaluated in a mouse model. Sepsis was induced in two inbred mouse strains, C57BL/6J (B6) and A/J, by cecal ligation and single puncture (CLP). Frequency of mortality was significantly higher in B6 than A/J mice from 36 to 132 h after CLP. Plasma TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, and IL-6 levels were similar in both strains after CLP. IL-10 plasma levels were significantly higher in B6 mice as opposed to A/J mice after 24 h of CLP. Similarly, hepatic myeloperoxidase activity, an index of polymorphonuclear leukocytes, was elevated in B6 mice as compared with A/J mice after 24 h of CLP. On the contrary, metallothionein mRNA levels were higher in A/J mice compared with B6 mice. Finally, leptin levels were also higher in A/J than B6 mice within 19 h of CLP. This study demonstrates a genetic contribution in the response to sepsis.
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PMID:Genetic contribution to the septic response in a mouse model. 1239 78

Leptin, which plays a key role in regulating energy homeostasis, may also modulate the inflammatory response. An inflammatory challenge with endotoxin has been shown to stimulate leptin release in the rodent. This finding has not been reproduced in humans or in nonhuman primates, although leptin levels have been reported to increase in septic patients. We have therefore examined the effects of endotoxin injection on plasma leptin levels in nine ovariectomized monkeys and four postmenopausal women. In an initial study in five monkeys, mean leptin levels did not increase during the first 5 h after endotoxin treatment, but did increase significantly from 6.4 +/- 2.1 ng/ml at baseline to 12.3 +/- 4.4 ng/ml at 24 h (P = 0.043). In a second study, a significant increase in leptin over time was noted after endotoxin treatment (P < 0.001); leptin release during the 16- to 24-h period after endotoxin injection was 48% higher than during the control period (P = 0.043). A similar stimulatory effect of endotoxin on leptin was observed when monkeys received estradiol replacement. In a third study, repeated injections of endotoxin over a 3-d period stimulated IL-6, ACTH, cortisol, and leptin release (P < 0.001). Leptin increased during the first day of treatment in all animals, but only monkeys with baseline plasma leptin levels greater than 10 ng/ml exhibited a sustained increase in leptin throughout the 3-d period. There was a significant correlation (r = 0.81; P = 0.008) between the mean baseline leptin level and the percent increase in leptin over baseline on the last day of treatment. In the human subjects, plasma leptin concentrations did not change significantly during the 7-h period after endotoxin injection. However, leptin increased in all four women from a mean baseline of 8.34 +/- 3.1 to 13.1 +/- 4.3 ng/ml 24 h after endotoxin (P = 0.038). In summary, endotoxin stimulates the release of leptin into peripheral blood in the human and nonhuman primate, but the time course is different from that reported in the rodent. These results are consistent with previous reports of increased blood leptin levels in patients with sepsis. The significance of these findings and the potential role of leptin in modulating the response to inflammation in the human require further study.
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PMID:Endotoxin stimulates leptin in the human and nonhuman primate. 1262 20

The principal aim of this study was to evaluate serum leptin concentrations and to analyze the interaction between serum leptin levels and C-reactive protein (CRP) levels, hematological parameters before and after antimicrobial therapy in neonates with bacterial septicemia. We studied 16 neonates with bacterial septicemia and 15 controls. Blood samples in neonates with septicemia were collected just before antimicrobial therapy and 2 weeks after treatment. The mean concentration of serum leptin, CRP levels, and immature/total neutrophil (IT) ratio in newborns with septicemia were significantly higher than those of controls at the start. Two weeks after treatment, serum leptin levels in newborns with septicemia had decreased and were similar to those of controls. Although there were positive correlations between serum leptin levels and serum CRP levels and IT ratio in the septicemic group at the start, there were no correlations between serum leptin levels and other hematological parameters. These results suggest that leptin is not only an adipostatic hormone but also a stress-related hormone.
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PMID:Serum leptin levels in neonatal bacterial septicemia. 1288 Jan 22

Circulating leptin concentrations are raised in animal models of inflammation and sepsis and leptin production is also increased in rodents by administration of endotoxin or cytokines. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of sepsis on serum leptin concentration and whether circulating leptin was related to tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) release in newborn infants. Plasma leptin, TNF-alpha and IL-6 were measured in 20 neonates with culture-proven sepsis as soon as sepsis was diagnosed and after recovery and in 15 healthy control infants. There was no significant difference in plasma leptin levels between septic and control infants (p > 0.05); there was also no difference in plasma leptin levels in septic neonates before and after therapy (p > 0.05). No relationship between leptin and TNF-alpha (r = 0.16, p > 0.05) or IL-6 (r = 0.12, p > 0.05) was identified. These findings suggest that a major role of leptin in acute neonatal sepsis appears unlikely.
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PMID:Serum leptin levels and their relationship to tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-6 in neonatal sepsis. 1471 52

Renal replacement therapy in acute renal failure (ARF) and chronic renal failure (end-stage renal disease; ESRD) has been based on the use of modifications of dialysis (continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration and hemodiafiltration) to remove middle-molecular-weight toxins, consisting of low-molecular-weight proteins and peptides (LMWP) and cytokines involved in inflammation. High-flux dialyzers are not efficient at removing LMWP, and for this reason, sorbents have been studied to augment or replace dialysis. Removal of LMWP such as beta2-microglobulin, leptin, complement factor D, angiogenin and cytokines such as interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, IL-10, IL-18 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha has been established in animal models of sepsis and in ESRD patients using sorbents. Sorbent devices added to hemodialysis, or the use of such devices alone in inflammatory states, including sepsis, ARF, cardiopulmonary bypass, pre-explantation of donor organs and ESRD, are being studied.
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PMID:Sorbents in acute renal failure and end-stage renal disease: middle molecule and cytokine removal. 1473 14

It is known that, among human patients with sepsis, acute renal failure (ARF) dramatically increases mortality rates to 50 to 80%. However, the pathogenesis of septic ARF is not fully understood. An increase in endotoxin-induced mortality rates for leptin-deficient ob/ob mice was recently demonstrated. In comparison with ob/ob mice, db/db mice, which are deficient in the long isoforms of leptin receptors (Ob/Rb), demonstrate lower mortality rates after exposure to the endotoxin LPS. In db/db mice, mRNA for the short isoforms of leptin receptors is constitutively expressed in the kidney, lung, liver, and macrophages. It is known that plasma leptin levels increase in rodents after exposure to LPS, and this was demonstrated for db/db mice. Because ob/ob and db/db mice are both obese, factors other than obesity must be involved in the increased mortality rates for ob/ob mice. In this study, the hypothesis that the short forms of leptin receptors might offer protection against endotoxin-induced lethality at least in part by providing protection against ARF was examined. Serum leptin levels were significantly increased with LPS treatment in wild-type and db/db mice but not ob/ob mice. GFR decreased significantly 16 h after the homozygous ob/ob mice received intraperitoneal injections of 0.3 mg/kg LPS (0.37 +/- 0.04 ml/min per g kidney versus 0.83 +/- 0.06 ml/min per g kidney, n = 6, P < 0.01); the mean arterial pressure (MAP) remained unchanged. For ob/ob littermates (+/?ob), there was no significant change in either MAP or GFR when the mice were challenged with the same time interval (16 h) and dose of LPS. In contrast to ob/ob mice, there was no significant change in GFR or MAP when homozygous db/db mice or their littermates received injections of an even higher dose of LPS (0.4 mg/kg). Mouse recombinant leptin had no effect on GFR when ob/ob mice received 0.3 mg/kg LPS injections. However, renal function (serum creatinine levels, 0.4 +/- 0.1 mg/dl versus 0.9 +/- 0.1 mg/dl, P < 0.01) and MAP (68 +/- 4 mmHg versus 51 +/- 2 mmHg, n = 6, P < 0.01) were significantly improved with leptin replacement when the ob/ob mice developed hypotensive ARF with a higher dose of LPS (0.5 mg/kg). In summary, the previously reported increased susceptibility to LPS of ob/ob mice, compared with db/db mice, may be attributable at least in part to increased susceptibility to ARF.
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PMID:Role of leptin deficiency in early acute renal failure during endotoxemia in ob/ob mice. 1497 66

Loss of the anabolic effect of insulin (insulin resistance) is a key component of the adverse metabolic consequences of sepsis and may contribute to the apparent lack of efficacy of feeding regimens in critically ill patients. The mechanisms which underlie the development of insulin resistance in stress remain unclear. In this series of studies, the locus of insulin resistance in the septic patient was shown to lie within the metabolic pathways of glucose storage (glycogen synthesis) within skeletal muscle, was noted to be unrelated to the actions of hormone mediators such as leptin and was shown not to be associated with altered nutrient-induced thermogenesis during total parenteral nutrition (TPN). Clinically applicable maximal rates of glucose-based TPN for septic patients were calculated. A technique was also developed in which insulin resistance could be induced and studied in healthy volunteers. These studies demonstrated that insulin resistance develops within 7 h of an inflammatory stimulus and, as in clinical sepsis, is characterised by selective impairment of glucose storage. Finally, a series of related studies indicated that the magnitude and nature of the inflammatory response in vivo could be enhanced by exogenous insulin infusion, indicating links between the hormone systems involved in intermediary metabolism and the inflammatory response. These findings have significant implications for the optimal design of feeding regimens for critically ill patients.
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PMID:Hunterian Lecture: Insulin resistance in human sepsis: implications for the nutritional and metabolic care of the critically ill surgical patient. 1500 22

Standard renal replacement therapy in acute renal failure (ARF) and end-stage renal disease (ESRD) is based on membrane technology. The transition from natural cellulosic membranes to synthetic membranes has not been associated with improvement in mortality rates. Modifications of dialysis with continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration and hemodiafiltration to remove middle molecular weight toxins, low molecular weight proteins and peptides (LMWP) and cytokines involved in inflammation appear to have reached their limits. High flux dialyzers are not efficient at removing LMWP and for this reason sorbents to augment or replace dialysis have been used in clinical trials. Removal of LMWP such as beta2-microglobulin, leptin, complement factor D, angiogenin, and cytokines such as IL-1, IL-6, IL-10, IL-18 and TNFalpha, have been established in animal models of sepsis, and in ESRD patients using sorbents in conjunction with high flux dialysis. Sorbent devices added to hemodialysis, or alone in inflammatory states, are being studied in diseases which possess a common pathway of systemic inflammatory response syndrome; these states are sepsis, ARF, cardio-pulmonary bypass, in brain dead subjects prior to explantation of donor organs and ESRD.
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PMID:Sorbents in the treatment of renal failure. 1546

The objective of the present report was to clarify the postoperative stress response of some inflammatory markers, namely of proinflammatory cytokines and leptin levels during uncomplicated postoperative periods. The results were compared with the dynamics of these parameters during intraabdominal sepsis. We followed 20 patients after a planned resection of colorectal cancer in stage Ib-IV with uncomplicated healing and 13 obese men after laparoscopic non-adjustable gastric banding. These were compared to 12 patients with proven postoperative sepsis. The control group consisted of 18 healthy men. The observed parameters included serum levels of cytokines, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFalpha), interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1 ra), IL-6, IL-8, soluble receptor of interleukin-2 (sIL-2R) and leptin. It was found that during the first 24 h after resection there was a significant increase in the serum concentration of IL-6 up to 1125+/-240 ng/l, which declined within the next 48-72 h. Serum concentration of TNFalpha was highest 18-24 h after resection (205+/-22 ng/l) and after banding (184+/-77 ng/l). IL-1 beta had a stable serum concentration without significant elevation. Serum concentration of IL-8 after resection rose to 520+/-200 ng/l after 36-48 h. Maximal cytokine levels after gastric banding were quantitatively lower (IL-6 414+/-240 ng/l, TNFalpha 184+/-77 ng/l) than after resection. We found significant elevation of plasma leptin concentration (32+/-10 ng/ml) 24 h after banding compared with preoperative values (18+/-5 ng/ml, p 0.05). Leptin levels 48 and 72 h after banding rapidly returned to the level before operation. During abdominal surgery leptin shows to be an acute phase reactant. Proinflammatory cytokines can be main regulatory factors of leptin during this period. Significant correlation between leptin and TNFalpha (similarly demonstrated by other authors in models of bacterial inflammation) indicates that TNFalpha can be the crucial regulator of leptin generation in the early postoperative period. On the basis of our results we recommend to observe IL-6 and IL-8 at 24-72 h after the surgery in patients with a high risk of early postoperative septic complications.
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PMID:The postoperative stress response and its reflection in cytokine network and leptin plasma levels. 1558 61

The triglyceride content of lipid depots associated with the current feeding level is the primary determinant of leptin gene expression and the circulating leptin level. In laboratory rodents and primates the plasma leptin is influenced also by the age, gender and physiological status (puberty, pregnancy, lactation, postpartum period), and by the health condition such as sepsis due to Gram-negative (GN) bacteria. Some pathologic conditions with intensive cytokine release evoke an increase in plasma leptin, which is thought to depress the subsequent feed intake. However, the effect of these secondary factors may be species-dependent, with still unknown clinical relevance in ruminants. In our ovine and bovine models plasma leptin increased after castration and dexamethasone treatment, decreased after experimental administration of synthetic androgens in castrated rams, but remained unchanged throughout the ovarian cycle and after ovariectomy. The circulating leptin level increased temporarily during synthetic progestin (fluorogestone) treatment in ewes, but similar changes were not seen in progesterone-supplemented ewes and norgestomet-treated cows. In a second trial on dairy cows we wanted to study whether elevated plasma leptin levels are induced by experimental endotoxin mastitis, or by natural outbreak of GN mastitis and puerperal metritis. Experimental endotoxin mastitis resulted in some-hour elevation in cortisol and insulin, with a simultaneous decrease in IGF-I and thyroid hormones. In the first 14 days of lactation GN mastitis induced the same endocrine alterations as the experimental endotoxin challenge, but in natural cases these changes varied within a wider range, and were more protracted and robust. Cows with puerperal metritis had more obvious catabolic changes in the early weeks of lactation, than their healthy counterparts. However, both mastitis and puerperal metritis failed to increase the circulating leptin level, showing that in cows the plasma leptin is not responsible for the anorexia associated with these inflammatory diseases.
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PMID:Feeding-unrelated factors influencing the plasma leptin level in ruminants. 1588 61


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