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Query: UMLS:C0036690 (
sepsis
)
59,461
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sepsis
is a major catabolic insult resulting in modifications in carbohydrate and fat energy metabolism, and leading to increased muscle breakdown and nitrogen loss. Insulin resistance, which develops in
sepsis
, decreases glucose utilization, but plasma insulin levels are sufficiently elevated to prevent lipolysis, resulting in a further energy deficit. The availability of fuels in
sepsis
is therefore limited, and the body resorts to muscle breakdown, gluconeogenesis, and amino acid oxidation for energy supply. Previous work has not defined, however, the exact alterations in amino acid metabolism. Therefore, the following studies were undertaken. Blood samples were drawn from fifteen patients in whom the diagnosis of
sepsis
was clinically established; the samples were analyzed for amino acid, beta-hydroxyphenylethanolamines, glucose, insulin and glucagon concentrations. The plasma amino acid pattern observed was characterized by an increase in total amino acid content, due mainly to high levels of the aromatic amino acids (phenylalanine and tyrosine) and the sulfur-containing amino acids (taurine, cystine and
methionine
). Alanine, aspartic acid, glutamic acid and proline were also elevated, but to a lesser degree. The branched chain amino acids (valine, leucine and isoleucine) were within normal limits, as were glycine, serine, threonine, lysine, histidine and tryptophan. Those patients who did not survive
sepsis
had higher levels of aromatic and sulfur-containing amino acids as compared to those patients surviving
sepsis
. On the other hand, those patients surviving
sepsis
had higher levels of alanine and the branched chain amino acids. In a second group of five patients with overwhelming
sepsis
accompanied by a state of metabolic encephalopathy, a parenteral nutrition solution consisting of 23% dextrose, and an amino acid formulation enriched with branched chain amino acids was administered. In these five patients, normalization of the plasma amino acid pattern and reversal of encephalopathy was observed. The following sequence of events may be postulated: The septic patient develops insulin resistance in the peripheral tissues, primarily muscle, while the adipose tissue is much less affected. The insulin resistance and the inability to utilize fat leads to increased muscle proteolysis. Muscle breakdown results in release into the blood of enormous amounts of various amino acids; the muscle itself is able to oxidize the branched chain amino acids, supplying the muscles' own energy requirements and alanine for gluconeogenesis. The extensive muscle proteolysis coupled with relative hepatic insufficiency occurring early in
sepsis
results in the appearance in the plasma of high levels of most of the amino acids present in muscle, particularly the aromatic and the sulfur-containing amino acids. The outcome of patients with
sepsis
might be positively affected by combined therapy with glucose, insulin and branched chain amino acids.
...
PMID:Amino acid derangements in patients with sepsis: treatment with branched chain amino acid rich infusions. 9 98
Sepsis
is a major catabolic insult resulting in a peripheral energy deficit which is made up in part by increased breakdown of lean body mass and oxidation of amino acids, principally the branched chain amino acids. The prognosis in any given case of
sepsis
is difficult to predict, but should theoretically be related to the degree of disturbance in peripheral energy deficit, which may in turn, be related to plasma amino acid pattern. In order to study whether this hypothesis was correct, plasma amino acids and some of their metabolic byproducts, the beta-hydroxyphenylethanolamines, were studied in 25 septic patients, and were used as discriminant variables in a series of computer performed discriminant analyses and multiple regressions. The two functions tested were the degree of metabolic septic encephalopathy as a determinant of the severity of
sepsis
and the final outcome in the septic patient. Plasma amino acid patterns exhibited elevated levels of the aromatic and sulfur containing amino acids, phenylalanine, tryosine, tryptophan,
methionine
, cysteine, and taurine, normal concentrations of alanine, and low normal concentrations of the branched chain amino acids, valine, leucine and isoleucine. Arginine levels, as previously noted, were very low. Patients not surviving the septic episode exhibited higher concentrations of aromatic and sulfur containing amino acids, while patients surviving
sepsis
had higher concentrations of the branched chain amino acids and arginine. When the degree of encephalopathy as a determinant of the severity of
sepsis
and step wise discriminant analysis with multiple crescent techniques were used, the best discriminant function between patients with and without encephalopathy was found to result from the interaction of cysteine,
methionine
, phenylalanine, isoleucine, leucine, and valine. These amino acids gave a correct classification in 82% of patients with no encephalopathy, and 80% of patients with septic encephalopathy. When the same amino acids were used for the discriminant analysis for patients dying of
sepsis
and patients surviving, the best discriminant function was achieved by using plasma concentrations of alanine, cysteine,
methionine
, isoleucine, arginine, tyrosine and phenylalanine resulting in 91% of the nonsurvivors, and 79% of the survivors correctly classified. The results suggest a close and significant relationship between the deranged energy metabolism and muscle protein breakdown in
sepsis
, and the outcome. This further suggests a central role for certain amino acids in perhaps predicting the severity of
sepsis
and its outcome.
...
PMID:Plasma amino acids as predictors of the severity and outcome of sepsis. 38 83
The importance of adhesion in regulating locomotion and accumulation of polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) has remained vague. We found that the chemotaxis of human PMN resuspended in heat-inactivated plasma was maximal toward 1-10 nM N-formyl-met-leu-phe (f-Met-Leu-Phe), but fell below random motility toward >/= 100 nM. This impressive decrease of motility was paralleled by increased cell adherence on Petri dishes being minimal at 1 nM and maximal at >10 nM f-
Met
-Leu-Phe (6+/-1 and 37+/-2% [SE] adherent cells, respectively). Checked by phase-contrast microscopy, cells under stimulated adhesion lost the typical bipolar shape of moving PMN and became immobilized and highly flattened. PMN, preexposed to 250 nM f-
Met
-Leu-Phe and tested after washing, retained increased adhesiveness and showed extremely low random and chemotactic motility. In contrast, preexposure to 1 nM f-
Met
-Leu-Phe had no effect on chemotaxis. Supporting the concept that immobilizing hyperadhesiveness does not correspond to a general functional hyporesponsiveness of PMN, no depression of the initial ingestion rate was observed in the presence of 250 nM f-
Met
-Leu-Phe. Moreover, a close correlation was found between the induction of PMN adhesiveness and the stimulation of the hexose monophosphate pathway activity as well as of lysomal enzyme release (r >/= 0.98). Thus, "chemotactic deactivation" and "high-dose inhibition of chemotaxis" by N-formyl peptides is the consequence of increased cell adhesiveness. This phenomenon provides a mechanism for cell trapping at the inflammatory site. Conversely, if operative in circulating blood, e.g., in
septicemia
, it may impair PMN emigration to such sites.
...
PMID:Modulating influence of chemotactic factor-induced cell adhesiveness on granulocyte function. 44 62
Fifteen thermally injured patients with positive blood stream cultures for gram-negative organisms demonstrated a decreased mass flow of glucose through the glucose space when compared with 17 patients without
sepsis
studied at a comparable time after injury. Amino acid concentrations determined in ten burned patients with
sepsis
and nine burned patients without
sepsis
revealed an increase in the gluconeogenic precursors alanine, glycine,
methionine
and phenylalanine in those patients with
sepsis
. The administration of alanine consistently increased serum glucose in seven patients without
sepsis
but exerted no effect on glucose concentrations in six person with
sepsis
. These data, taken together, indicate that gram-negative
sepsis
in burned patients impairs the increased rate of glucose production and flow to peripheral tissue which characteristically occurs after thermal injury.
...
PMID:Impaired glucose flow in burned patients with gram-negative sepsis. 98 49
Arterial plasma amino acids were measured in 27 patients with serious septic complications after operation, 15 patients following reduction of femoral shaft fractures and nine control patients on the first and third days following uneventful major abdominal surgery. Amino acid concentrations in the controls were similar to those which have been reported during early starvation. The amino acid patterns seen in all groups did not resemble that previously observed following glucocorticoid administration. In the patients with infection, mean phenylalanine concentration (108.0 +/- 46.9 mumoles per liter) was significantly greater than in the controls on the first (p greater than 0.001) or third (p less than 0.001) postoperative days. Four of the septic patients with hyperphenylalaninemia also had elevated arterial
methionine
concentrations. These observations suggest that many of the patients with
sepsis
had seriously impaired liver metabolism. In patients with fractures, the concentrations of ornithine (p less than 0.001), taurine (p less than 0.05), and aspartic acid (p less than 0.05) were lower than in controls. No other significant differences of amino acid concentrations were observed. It is difficult to relate these differences to a specific metabolic abnormality.
...
PMID:Arterial plasma amino acids in patients with serious postoperative infection and in patients with major fractures. 125 95
The sequential changes in plasma free amino acid concentration were analyzed and compared in burned patients with
sepsis
(n = 12) and without
sepsis
(n = 19). After burn injury, phenylalanine,
methionine
, lysine, and the Phe/Tyr ratio were significantly increased in two groups (P < 0.05-0.01). Threonine, serine, histidine, arginine, proline and BCAA/AAA ratio were significantly decreased in two groups (P < 0.05-0.001). The Phel Tyr ratio in patients with
sepsis
was much higher than that in patients without
sepsis
on postburn days 14 and 21 (P < 0.05), while the BCAA/AAA ratio in patients with
sepsis
was much lower than that in patients without
sepsis
on postburn day 14 (P < 0.01). The level of proline in patients with
sepsis
was much higher than that in patients without
sepsis
on postburn days 3 and 7 (P < 0.05). It is suggested that these results, in collaboration with other clinical and laboratory findings, may be helpful in foretelling the probable development of
sepsis
in patients with major burns.
...
PMID:[Changes in plasma free amino acid concentration in burned patients with sepsis]. 130 55
Leukocyte activation is a property of systemic infection. Animal experiments indicate interleukin-1 (IL-1) as a possible modulator, while contradictory results have been reported from in-vitro stimulation of isolated leukocytes. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the activation of isolated polymorphonuclear (PMN) leukocytes in vitro by preparations of recombinant human IL-1 beta and IL-1 receptor antagonist, which in earlier studies could elicit and abrogate, respectively, a
sepsis
-like syndrome in rabbits. They have also been shown to influence acute phase protein synthesis in mice and rats, and release of leukocyte cathepsin G in vivo. It was found that recombinant human IL-1 beta elicited a dose-dependent luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence response in isolated human PMN leukocytes in the dose range 8.8 x 10(-11)-8.8 x 10(-8) M. The effect could be blocked by prior treatment with the IL-1 receptor antagonist, indicating a direct effect on the specific IL-1 receptor. Preincubation by IL-1 beta enhanced the effect of a secondary challenge with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate or formyl-
Met
-Leu-Phe by 30-40%. The priming effect of rhIL-1 beta could also be blocked by the specific receptor antagonist. In this study, incubation of PMN leukocytes with rhIL-1 beta failed to induce degranulation of both azurophil (neutrophil proteinase 4/proteinase 3) and specific (lactoferrin) granules. rhIL-1 beta has been shown to induce degranulation in vivo, which is thus indicated as an indirect effect. We conclude that IL-1 beta is a direct and specific, but probably weak stimulator of the PMN leukocyte.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Stimulation of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes by recombinant human interleukin-1 beta. 162 64
Primed neutrophils may contribute to endothelial and end-organ damage after burn injury because of increased endothelial adherence and enhanced toxic oxygen metabolite generation in response to a "second insult" such as bacterial
sepsis
. The purposes of this study were to determine: (1) whether serum from patients with thermal injury causes priming of the neutrophil NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase, (2) whether time after burn (early vs late) influences neutrophil priming, and (3) whether priming could be attenuated by a specific platelet-activating factor antagonist, WEB2170. Normal human neutrophils were incubated with 10% sera that was obtained from healthy adult controls (normal human sera) and with 10% sera from patients with greater than 30% total body surface area burns, which was collected early (early postburn sera) (i.e., between 12 and 48 hours after burn) or late (late postburn sera) (5 to 15 days, after burn). Priming of the neutrophil oxidase was tested for by measurement of the generation of superoxide anion after a stimulus of 10(-6) mol/L formyl-
methionine
-leucine-phenylalanine (fMLP). In separate experiments, neutrophils were pretreated with WEB2170 before serum incubation and fMLP stimulation to block any priming that may be mediated by platelet-activating factor. All sera caused an increased rate of superoxide anion production in response to fMLP and thus "primed" the neutrophil NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase. Greater priming occurred after incubation with late postburn sera than with other sera. WEB2170 completely inhibited priming by normal human sera and early postburn sera and partially inhibited priming by late postburn sera.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:WEB2170, a specific platelet-activating factor antagonist, attenuates neutrophil priming by human serum after clinical burn injury: the 1991 Moyer Award. 166 Dec 87
Cytokines have been implicated in the modulation of fat metabolism after
sepsis
. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT), the regulatory enzyme of hepatic mitochondrial long-chain fatty-acid oxidation, is involved in the control of hepatic fat oxidation in
sepsis
. Using either H4IIe rat hepatoma cells or rat hepatocytes in primary culture, we tested the hypothesis that interleukin-1-alpha (IL-1 alpha) would modulate CPT transcription (CPT mRNA), CPT translation (35S-
methionine
CPT protein incorporation), and hepatic mitochondrial oxidation of 1-Carbon 14-labeled (14C) palmitate to ketone bodies (acid soluble products). We showed that IL-1 alpha significantly increased CPT mRNA, 35S-
methionine
incorporation CPT protein, and hepatic mitochondrial oxidation of 1-14C-palmitate to acid soluble products. We further hypothesized that the Ca2+ second messenger system may play a role in the IL-1 alpha induction of hepatic CPT gene transcription. We showed that either calcium ionophore (A23187) or phorbol myristate acetate increased CPT gene transcription and that either calcium chelation, protein kinase C inhibition (acridine orange), or chronic exposure to phorbol myristate acetate significantly inhibited IL-1 alpha induction of CPT mRNA. We conclude that the IL-1 alpha increases in hepatic mitochondrial fatty-acid oxidation may be, in part, secondary to increased CPT gene transcription and translation and that the Ca2+ second messenger system may play an important role in IL-1 alpha induction of CPT gene transcription.
...
PMID:The Ca2+ second messenger system and interleukin-1-alpha modulation of hepatic gene transcription and mitochondrial fat oxidation. 185 38
The myeloperoxidase-hydrogen peroxide-chloride (MPO-H2O2-Cl) system is an antimicrobial system of polymorphonuclear leukocytes. We demonstrated that the MPO-H2O2-Cl system is fungicidal for Trichophyton rubrum. Fungal growth of a synchronous cell culture of T. rubrum germlings was assayed by measuring the uptake of tritiated N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, and the viability of the fungi was assayed by counting colony-forming units. Cytotoxins produced by the interaction of myeloperoxidase with hydrogen peroxide and chloride ion were fungicidal for T. rubrum. Growth inhibition was abolished in the presence of catalase or L-
methionine
. Polymorphonuclear leukocytes through the MPO-H2O2-Cl system may prevent invasion and
sepsis
by dermatophytes even in the absence of specific immunity.
...
PMID:Inhibition of growth of Trichophyton rubrum by the myeloperoxidase-hydrogen peroxide-chloride system. 253 15
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