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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of adrenaline and isoproterenol, a specific beta-adrenergic agonist, on TNF production were investigated. Both agents inhibited the production of TNF by human blood and THP-1 cells stimulated by LPS. The effect of adrenaline was prevented by a beta-receptor antagonist, but not by an alpha-receptor antagonist. Levels of TNF mRNA were not reduced by adrenaline. Inhibition of TNF production was observed only if cells were first exposed to adrenaline or isoproterenol at about the same time as to LPS; incubation of THP-1 cells with isoproterenol for 24 h before LPS stimulation dramatically increased response, and prevented suppression of TNF production by a second dose of isoproterenol. Intracellular cAMP levels were increased by adrenaline and isoproterenol, at concentrations that inhibited TNF production. However, prolonged incubation of THP-1 cells with isoproterenol resulted in depression of cAMP concentrations to below basal levels. These data suggest that TNF production can be regulated by beta-receptor stimulation, that such regulation is mediated by changes in intracellular cAMP concentrations and is exerted at a posttranscriptional level.
Adrenaline
may be an important endogenous regulator of TNF production in
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Regulation of tumor necrosis factor production by adrenaline and beta-adrenergic agonists. 135 Feb 91
The effects of cyclosporine administration on the adrenocortical response to the severe stress of burn wound
sepsis
were studied in Wistar rats. Animals were treated with cyclosporine (10 mg/kg/day) or saline by gavage for 10 days, then subjected to 30% scald burns with wound inoculation with Pseudomonas. Animals were sacrificed on Postburn Days (PBDs) 1, 4, and 7 for determination of serum corticosterone and ACTH levels and adrenal weights and histology.
Adrenal
glands from animals sacrificed on PBD 7 were also analyzed for DNA, RNA, and protein content. Cyclosporine treatment without injury had no significant effect on body weight gain, adrenal mass, or baseline ACTH or corticosterone levels. During
sepsis
, cyclosporine-treated animals demonstrated a significantly diminished adrenocortical response compared to those given only saline. Serum corticosterone levels in the cyclosporine group were 45, 53, and 62% lower on PBDs 1, 4, and 7, respectively, than in saline-treated controls (P < 0.01 on each day). ACTH levels were 43 and 36% lower in cyclosporine-treated animals on PBDs 4 and 7, respectively, compared to the saline-treated group (P < 0.05 on each day). Adrenal hyperplasia occurred in both groups by PBD 7, but increases in adrenal mass and in histologic changes associated with hyperplasia (lipid depletion, vascular dilation) were less pronounced in cyclosporine-treated animals compared to those receiving saline, while adrenal composition remained similar between the two groups. Thus, cyclosporine administration is associated with an attenuated adrenocortical response to the stress of
sepsis
due to diminished circulating levels of ACTH.
...
PMID:Effect of cyclosporine on adrenocortical response to injury and infection. 138 13
Stress reactions exist in many conditions in which plasma interleukin 6 (IL-6) is elevated. Examples are burns and
sepsis
. In these situations fever is often present. These stress situations are always accompanied with high levels of adrenalin and corticosteroids. These hormones, especially when given together, elicit a definite response of acute phase proteins in normal rats. In two stress models, (i) laparotomy and (ii) fever induced by administration of PGE2 in the lateral intracerebral ventricle, we observed a rise of adrenalin and corticosteron followed by an elevated level of plasma IL-6. Therefore, we studied the effect of adrenalin and corticosteron on the plasma level of IL-6.
Adrenalin
evokes high levels of IL-6, and this effect can be blocked by propranolol. When IL-6 release is blocked in this way, the response of alpha 2 macroglobulin and the cysteine protease inhibitor, both fast-reacting acute phase proteins in rat, is strongly depressed. Isoprenalin, an adreno beta 2 agonist, also causes very high levels of IL-6, indicating that the release of IL-6 can be mediated by an adreno beta 2 receptor whose presence has been demonstrated in monocytic cells. The results suggest a relation between stress situations and IL-6 and may be another factor besides the presence of endotoxins, virus, etc. explaining the high levels of IL-6 observed in many serious clinical situations.
...
PMID:The relation among stress, adrenalin, interleukin 6 and acute phase proteins in the rat. 169 83
Epinephrine
produces smaller incremental increases in plasma glucose concentration and rate of glucose appearance (Ra) in septic rats compared with nonseptic animals. In the present study, we investigated the role of insulin in the diminished response of septic rats to epinephrine-induced increases in glucose turnover. Glucose kinetics were assessed by the infusion of [6-3H]-glucose in conscious catheterized rats made septic by subcutaneous injections of live Escherichia coli.
Epinephrine
was infused at 1 micrograms/min/kg for 2 hours in the presence and absence of somatostatin and mannoheptulose (SRIF + MH). In comparison to nonseptic control animals, epinephrine-induced increases in plasma glucose concentration and glucose Ra were blunted by more than 50% in the septic rats. Infusion of SRIF + MH with epinephrine restored the blunted response to normal. During the infusion of epinephrine alone, the plasma insulin concentration in the septic rats was 2.8-fold higher than the nonseptic controls. SRIF + MH lowered the plasma insulin concentrations in both the nonseptic and septic rats to less than 10 microU/mL. SRIF + MH reversed the
sepsis
-induced hyperglucagonemia, but did not prevent a slight increase in glucagon levels during the epinephrine infusion in the nonseptic rats. In a second study, septic rats infused with SRIF + MH and replacement insulin showed a smaller increase in glucose concentration and glucose production in response to epinephrine than did septic animals administered SRIF + MH and no insulin. These results indicate that insulin plays an important role in the diminished response of septic rats to epinephrine.
...
PMID:Role of insulin in the blunted glucose metabolic response of septic rats to epinephrine. 197 24
In an open prospective study, adrenaline administration in ten patients with eleven episodes of septic shock was studied. Appropriate supportive therapy (antibiotics, laparotomies, parenteral alimentation, ventilation) was given as needed. Haemoglobin was kept at or about 12 g%, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure kept at approximately 15 mmHg, and cardiac index at greater than 4.5 l/min/m2. Only when systemic vascular resistance (SVR) dropped below 600 dyn. s. cm-5 was adrenaline given to raise the latter to no higher than 800 dyn. s. cm-5 and the adrenaline was titrated to this end point.
Adrenaline
was used at doses up to 0.47 microgram/kg/min for up to nineteen days. There was no reliable dose response curve for adrenaline: each septic insult needed different dosages. However, if high enough doses were given, SVR eventually increased. There was no deterioration in cardiac index nor further increase in pulse rate and no renal damage was demonstrated. Only one patient died in septic shock. Two others died from causes not directly related to
sepsis
and another two while still in hospital, but again not septic. Five patients were eventually discharged from hospital.
Adrenaline
can thus be used as a vasoconstrictor in septic shock without adverse effects, but initial doses have to be high and the effects measured and titrated carefully. Used this way, adrenaline provides time for the eradication of
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Vasoconstrictor effects of adrenaline in human septic shock. 201 97
1. Male Sprague-Dawley or Wistar rats were injected with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 5 mg kg-1, i.p.) and killed after 1, 3, 6, 15, and 24 h. The brains, mesenteries, spleens, lungs, livers, kidneys, hearts, aortae and diaphragms were removed and frozen immediately. Control rats were injected with sterile saline and killed after 6 h. 2. The organs were homogenized in a semi-frozen state and NO synthase (NOS) activity measured in tissues from both LPS-treated and saline-treated groups by the ability of homogenates to convert [3H]-L-arginine to [3H]-L-citrulline in a NADPH-dependent manner. 3. The NOS activity in all organs taken from control animals was found to be calcium-dependent, with the highest activity being in the brain. After LPS-treatment an induced calcium-independent NOS was detected in all tissues tested, with the exception of the brain. The spleen, lung, mesentery and liver had the highest amounts of LPS-induced NOS activity. No induction of calcium-dependent NOS was detected. 4. Induction of NOS was maximum 6 h after administration of LPS and had returned to control levels in 24 h. 5. The constitutive NOS in brain and mesentery and the LPS-induced activities in the spleen, lung, liver and mesentery were inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA) or NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME) according to concentration. The IC50 for L-NAME was 2.5 microM against the constitutive NOS from brain, and 20-25 microM against the inducible NOS. For L-NMMA the IC50 was 20-25 microM against either NOS isoform. 7. The vascular responses to endothelin-I (ET-1), the thromboxane A2-mimetic 11 alpha,9 alpha-epoxymethanoprostaglandin F2alpha (U46619), phenylephrine (PE) or 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were measured in the simultaneously perfused arterial and venous mesenteric vascular beds from both control and LPS-treated(6 h) rats.
Vasoconstrictor
responses to all agonists tested were unaffected by LPS treatment. In the presence of L-NAME (100 microM) vasoconstrictor responses were potentiated in both the arterial and venous portion of the mesenteric beds from both control and LPS-treated rats. The potentiation of responses to U46619 was significantly greater in beds from LPS-treated rats.8. Injection of LPS i.p. is associated with induction of NOS in all organs tested, except for the brain. In the mesentery this is not accompanied by a hyporesponsiveness to constrictor agents suggesting an increased sensitivity, particularly to U46619. This may explain the poor perfusion and tissue damage in the splanchnic circulation associated with
sepsis
.
...
PMID:Induction by endotoxin of nitric oxide synthase in the rat mesentery: lack of effect on action of vasoconstrictors. 768 6
Patients with end-stage liver disease have significant mortality often associated with intercurrent episodes of bleeding or
sepsis
. Intact adrenal function is essential in such situations. In order to test the hypothesis that adrenal insufficiency might be present in severe liver disease, hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal function was evaluated in patients with end-stage liver disease awaiting transplantation. The study had a prospective, open comparative design with patients restricted to those having non-alcoholic liver disease in order to avoid the confounding direct effects of alcohol on adrenocortical function. Fifty-one consecutive patients with end-stage, non-alcoholic liver disease undergoing evaluation for liver transplantation and 40 healthy controls were studied. Patients who had used corticosteroids (n = 8) or who were unable to complete the investigations (n = 5) were excluded leaving 38 patients eligible for analysis.
Adrenal
function was evaluated under basal conditions by single morning measurements of plasma total and free cortisol, corticosteroid-binding globulin, dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate and by adrenal stimulation indirectly using insulin-induced (0.1 U/kg, i.v.) hypoglycaemia and/or directly by adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH); 250 micrograms tetracosactrin, i.v.) stimulation. Compared with healthy controls, patients with liver disease had a 64% reduction in maximal increments of plasma cortisol to indirect adrenal stimulation via insulin-induced hypoglycaemia and a 39% reduction to direct adrenal stimulation by ACTH (all P < 0.001). There was a significant negative correlation between the severity of underlying liver disease as assessed by Child-Pugh scores and peak control responses to ACTH (r = -0.647, P < 0.0001) and insulin-induced hypoglycaemia (r = -0.597, P < 0.0001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Hypothalamic-pituitary adrenal function in end-stage non-alcoholic liver disease. 839 Aug 70
Short-term preexposure of mononuclear cells to epinephrine inhibits LPS-induced production of TNF, whereas preexposure for 24 h results in increased TNF production. To assess the effects of epinephrine infusions of varying duration on in vivo responses to LPS, the following experiments were performed: (a) Blood obtained from eight subjects at 4-24 h after the start of a 24-h infusion of epinephrine (30 ng/kg per min) produced less TNF after ex vivo stimulation with LPS compared with blood drawn before the start of the infusion, and (b) 17 healthy men who were receiving a continuous infusion of epinephrine (30 ng/kg per min) started either 3 h (EPI-3; n = 5) or 24 h (EPI-24; n = 6) were studied after intravenous injection of LPS (2 ng/kg, lot EC-5). EPI-3 inhibited LPS-induced in vivo TNF appearance and also increased IL-10 release (both P < 0.005 versus LPS), whereas EPI-24 only attenuated TNF secretion (P = 0.05). In separate in vitro experiments in whole blood, epinephrine increased LPS-induced IL-10 release by a combined effect on alpha and beta adrenergic receptors. Further, in LPS-stimulated blood, the increase on IL-10 levels caused by epinephrine only marginally contributed to concurrent inhibition of TNF production.
Epinephrine
, either endogenously produced or administered as a component of
sepsis
treatment, may have a net antiinflammatory effect on the cytokine network early in the course of systemic infection.
...
PMID:Epinephrine inhibits tumor necrosis factor-alpha and potentiates interleukin 10 production during human endotoxemia. 860 27
Adrenalin
insufficiency associated with adrenal hemorrhage, is a rare complication after cardiac surgery in neonates. A boy suffering from transposition of the great arteries, who had an arterial switch-operation on day three of his life, acquired a bilateral adrenal hemorrhage. Clinically the situation resembled a septic shock. Despite large doses of catecholamines, he continued to have severe arterial hypotension, anuria, and kyperkalemia. The clinical condition did not change, although
sepsis
specific therapy was initiated. Consequently adrenal insufficiency, as a possible postoperative complication, was considered and prednisolon, initially in a dose of 15 mg/kg/d, was administered. The clinical condition improved dramatically. The diagnosis could be confirmed by ultrasound examination and determination of cortisol and ACTH plasma levels. Adrenal insufficiency was only transitory, adrenal sonography on day 135 returned to normal. The surgical procedure on heart-lung bypass, the obligatory anticoagulation and the perioperative stress have to be considered as pathogenetic factors.
...
PMID:[Therapy refractory arterial hypotension after heart operation]. 912 Oct 76
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is involved in the pathogenesis of acute
sepsis
-induced organ injury and has been implicated as a mediator of metabolic alterations observed during
sepsis
. Pancreatic islet cell function may be significantly compromised during
sepsis
or endotoxemia, and
sepsis
also increases plasma levels of epinephrine, a modifier of islet insulin secretion. We proposed that islets exposed to bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) produce TNF and that epinephrine attenuates islet secretory activity. We monitored the effects of LPS and epinephrine on TNF and insulin activity of isolated Wistar-Furth rat islets (pancreas digested with collagenase, islets isolated using Ficoll gradients; n = 4 islet populations, each with 632 +/- 11 islets/2.5 ml culture medium). Islets were incubated (37 degrees C, 5% CO2) 3 days. LPS (Escherichia coli, 1 microgram/ml) and epinephrine (14 micrograms/ml) were added to the islets, and incubations were continued for 1-4 h. Glucose (Beckman Glucose Analyzer), insulin (radioimmunoassay), and TNF (L929 cytotoxicity assay) were measured in the islet medium samples at 1- to 4-h time points. In the conditioned medium, glucose decreased (P < 0.05), insulin increased (P < 0.05), and exposure to LPS did not alter these levels [P = not significant (NS)] but did increase TNF activity by 400% (P < 0.05).
Epinephrine
reduced insulin by 38-43% (P < 0.05) and TNF by 20-25% (P < 0.05) but had no effect on glucose levels (P = NS). We conclude that insulin is secreted from isolated islets and that exposure to LPS acutely increases islet-derived TNF activity, whereas epinephrine modifies TNF and insulin secretion of rat pancreatic islets.
...
PMID:Tumor necrosis factor activity of pancreatic islets. 927 98
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