Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0243026 (sepsis)
52,417 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five patients with AIDS and Listeria monocytogenes infection (three cases of bacteremia and two of meningitis) are reviewed. Four patients had prior or concurrent gastrointestinal illness. Two patients received corticosteroids. A 7- to 21-day course of ampicillin was administered with or without a 7- to 14-day course of gentamicin. This regimen was effective, with no evidence of relapse 7-8 months after therapy was discontinued. The relative infrequency of infection with L. monocytogenes in AIDS patients is unexpected. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) appears to be essential in the inhibition of Listeria in vivo. Elevated levels of TNF in AIDS patients may be protective against listeriosis and thus help explain the low prevalence of listerial infection in this population. Nonetheless, although L. monocytogenes is an uncommon cause of illness in patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus, it cannot be dismissed as a cause of undefined meningitis or sepsis.
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PMID:Listeria monocytogenes infections in patients with AIDS: report of five cases and review. 186 44

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a potent cytokine mediator of the shock states associated with sepsis and burn injury. This experimental study was done to determine whether circulating TNF plays a major role in the vasomotor collapse seen following experimental hemorrhage and blunt injury. Twenty anesthetized pigs were divided into two groups. Ten animals were bled 60% of their calculated blood volume in 15 minutes. Animals in Group IA (n = 5) had no treatment, and Group IB animals (n = 5) were given twice the shed volume as crystalloid 30 minutes after hemorrhage. The other animals, groups IIa and IIb (n = 5 each), were first subjected to a blunt injury to the thigh sufficient to cause a midshaft femur fracture, then bled and similarly treated. In both groups, mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac output (CO), and serum TNF activity by L929 bioassay were measured at 15-minute intervals for 120 minutes after hemorrhage or hemorrhage and blunt injury. An additional three animals were infused with 4 x 10(8)/kg heat-killed E. coli to validate the TNF assay. All bled animals sustained a fall in MAP and CO to a mean of 33% of baseline values, with or without fracture. Group IB and IIB animals responded to fluid resuscitation by restoration of MAP and CO to 85%-97% of the baseline values. Tumor necrosis factor was not detectable before injury and remained undetectable in all these animals during the 120 minutes of the experiment despite hemorrhage alone or combined hemorrhage and blunt trauma, with or without fluid resuscitation. The test animals receiving the E. coli responded with markedly elevated TNF levels, which peaked at 90 minutes after injection.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Experimental hemorrhage and blunt trauma do not increase circulating tumor necrosis factor. 187 32

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is an important mediator of the systemic response to gram-negative sepsis and endotoxemia. We studied the renal effects of a sublethal TNF infusion in dogs (0.54 = 10(5) international units per kilogram of body weight during a six hour period). The TNF-infused dogs (n = 4) had marked polyuria and natriuresis in comparison with those in the control group (n = 12) (urine output, 35.3 +/- 4.1 versus 3.7 +/- 0.5 millimeters per kilogram per six hours p less than 0.01; sodium excretion, 2.82 +/- 0.27 versus 0.75 +/- 0.19, p less than 0.01). To evaluate the role of the spleen in this response, seven dogs that had splenectomy were infused with TNF. Splenectomy abolished both the polyuria and the natriuresis; this could not be explained by the differences in fluid balance or in hemodynamic or metabolic alterations. Treatment with ibuprofen given intravenously (12.5 milligrams per kilogram 40 minutes before and three hours after the beginning of TNF infusion) in eight dogs that did not undergo splenectomy also abolished these renal effects. Prostaglandin 2 (PGE2) concentrations in selected blood samples from the splenic vein did not increase with TNF infusion, excluding circulating PGE2 as a possible mediator of the renal effects. The results of these studies indicate that, during septic challenge or severe inflammation, the spleen participates in signaling the kidney to increase water and sodium excretion. These renal events are mediated through the cyclo-oxygenase pathway.
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PMID:Splenectomy attenuates the inappropriate diuresis associated with tumor necrosis factor administration. 190 Sep 57

Endotoxin is composed of lipid A, the toxic moiety, of the core region, a conserved structure among Gram-negative bacteria, and of the O-side chains, a highly variable part responsible for the antigenic specificity. The concept of cross-protection afforded by antiserum raised against the core region of endotoxin is supported by the following data: experimentally antiserum protected against infections caused by a wide range of Gram-negative bacteria or endotoxins; in patients with Gram-negative bacteremia, survival was associated with high levels of anti-core antibodies, and mortality was reduced by the prophylactic or therapeutic use of immune serum or plasma. However, the proof that protection is afforded by cross-protective anti-core antibodies is still lacking. Furthermore, many experimental studies and clinical studies trials have shown controversial results. Ongoing experimental studies and recently completed clinical trials, using either polyclonal or monoclonal anti-core antibodies should help clarify the issues both of the clinical efficacy and of the mechanism of protection. Tumor necrosis factor/cachectin has been unequivocally shown, both in experimental animal models and in humans to be a pivotal mediator of the clinical and humoral manifestations of shock induced by endotoxin or by whole Gram-negative bacteria. In humans, TNF was been transiently detected in the blood of volunteers challenged with endotoxin, in a small proportion of patients with Gram-negative sepsis, but in the vast majority of patients with established septic shock. However, in patients the magnitude and the evolution of the blood concentration of TNF differed from that observed in animal models or in human volunteers after an acute challenge with either Gram-negative bacteria or endotoxin, probably reflecting differences in infectious stimuli. In children with meningococemia and in adults with Gram-negative septic shock, TNF was associated with the patient's outcome. Anti-TNF monoclonal antibodies are presently undergoing clinical investigation in patients with septic shock. However, one should keep in mind that TNF serves both beneficial and detrimental functions depending upon its concentration in body fluids.
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PMID:Anti-lipopolysaccharide and anti-tumor necrosis factor/cachectin antibodies for the treatment of gram-negative bacteremia and septic shock. 192 24

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a macrophage product released in response to endotoxin and other stimuli, has been shown to be a central mediator of endotoxin or septic shock. However, its highly conserved and wide-ranging physiological effects suggest that it may also be an essential cytokine in the host defense against acute bacterial infection or sepsis. A single nontoxic dose of human recombinant TNF administered intravenously 24 h prior to a lethal infusion of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS) completely prevented acute LPS-induced hypotension, ameliorated tissue injury in the lungs and liver, and improved survival in male Fisher 344 rats. The protective effects of TNF were dose dependent and required a 24-h pretreatment interval. After the infusion of LPS, animals in both groups (TNF-treated animals and saline-pretreated controls) initially appeared acutely ill and had a similar severe metabolic acidosis, indicating that TNF did not inactivate or prevent the toxic effects of LPS. Twelve hours after the administration of TNF, the gene for manganous superoxide dismutase, a mitochondrial enzyme which scavenges toxic reactive oxygen species and is induced during conditions which generate a free radical stress, was expressed in liver tissue, suggesting that the induction of manganous superoxide dismutase may be an important in vivo protective mechanism against cellular injury during lethal endotoxemia.
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PMID:Single-dose tumor necrosis factor protection against endotoxin-induced shock and tissue injury in rats. 193 48

Using a model of sepsis induced by parenteral challenge of mice with bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS), the authors analyzed the in vivo expression of interleukin-1 (IL-1) alpha,beta and tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Both TNF and IL-1 alpha,beta were detected in hepatic sinusoidal macrophages (Kupffer cells), immunohistochemically. Kinetic analysis showed a clear sequence of synthesis. Tumor necrosis factor was produced first, reaching maximal expression at 1 hour after LPS challenge, then rapidly disappeared. IL-1 beta followed, reaching maximal expression at 2 to 3 hours, then dropped off by 6 hours. Interleukin-1 alpha expression reached a peak at 6 hours and had disappeared by 18 hours. Analysis of serum bioactivity also revealed sequential expression that correlated with immunohistochemical findings. Tumor necrosis factor was maximal at 1 hour and IL-1 at 6 hours. The IL-1 bioactivity was not due to interleukin-6 (IL-6), as this was depleted from specimens by immunoabsorption. Also IL-6 bioactivity reached maximal levels at 3 hours, earlier than IL-1. Pretreatment with 4 mg/kg dexamethasone significantly decreased Kupffer cell expression of TNF and IL-1 alpha (about 80% and 60% suppression, respectively) but had less effect on IL-1 beta expression (about 30% suppression). Accordingly, serum levels of TNF were suppressed by 75% while serum IL-1 was decreased by 39%, indicating differential sensitivity of these cytokines to glucocorticoids. Endogenous corticosteroid levels increased as TNF levels decreased, supporting the contention that glucocorticoids regulate TNF synthesis. In contrast, IL-1 levels rose concurrently with corticosterone. These data indicate a sequential activation of cytokine gene expression in vivo, which may be critical to the cascade of events leading to septic shock, and provide evidence that Kupffer cells are a major source of cytokines in endotoxemia. Finally, the differential sensitivity of cytokine expression to glucocorticoids may in part explain the inadequacy of the latter in the treatment of sepsis.
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PMID:In vivo biologic and immunohistochemical analysis of interleukin-1 alpha, beta and tumor necrosis factor during experimental endotoxemia. Kinetics, Kupffer cell expression, and glucocorticoid effects. 199 64

Group B streptococcus (GBS), a common neonatal gram-positive pathogen, causes similar pathophysiologic features in human newborns and neonatal animal models of sepsis. Previous reports suggest that mediators in addition to TxA2 and PGI2 contribute to the late effects of GBS infusion (2 to 4 h), which include persistent increases in Ppa, hypoxemia, systemic hypotension, and a progressive fall in CO. Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) infusion in animals produces several of the late GBS effects. We hypothesized that GBS causes increased serum TNF levels 2 to 4 h into infusion in neonatal piglets. We also postulated that the TNF inhibitor, pentoxifylline (PTF), would attenuate both GBS-induced TNF production and late GBS effects. In piglets infused with 1.25 x 10(9) cfu/kg/h of GBS, serum TNF levels (pg/ml, ELISA assay) significantly increased at 2 h (231 +/- 41) and at 4 h (1,047 +/- 290, n = 9). In piglets infused with concomitant GBS + PTF, serum TNF levels at 4 h (208 +/- 39, n = 8) were reduced compared to GBS alone piglets (p less than 0.02). Control piglets infused with 0.9% saline or PTF alone for 4 h had no detectable serum TNF (less than 35). GBS alone and GBS + PTF infusion caused similar increases in serum TxB2 levels at 1, 2, and 4 h. Serum 6-keto-PGF1 alpha levels (pg/0.1 ml) significantly increased at 4 h (85 +/- 18) with GBS alone, and were more elevated at 4 h (306 +/- 75) with GBS + PTF infusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Group B streptococcus induces tumor necrosis factor in neonatal piglets. Effect of the tumor necrosis factor inhibitor pentoxifylline on hemodynamics and gas exchange. 200 Oct 73

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) may be involved in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury (ALI) associated with septicemia. Therefore, we measured plasma TNF activity during sepsis and development of lung injury in a porcine model of ALI. Plasma samples were obtained from anesthetized saline-infused control pigs (n = 10) and those infused for 1 h with live Pseudomonas aeruginosa (10(8) organisms/ml, 0.3 ml/20 kg/min) (n = 16). TNF activity was measured in plasma using the L929 fibroblast cytolytic assay. L929 cytotoxicity caused by TNF-alpha or TNF-beta was determined in plasma by measuring the cytotoxicity neutralized by TNF antisera. No significant TNF activity was detected in control pig plasma. In septic pigs, TNF activity appeared in plasma 15 min after onset of septicemia and remained elevated throughout the experiment (6.1 +/- 10.2% to 80.0 +/- 5.0%, 15 and 300 min, respectively). The appearance of pulmonary arterial hypertension, increased lung water, decreased lung compliance, and deteriorating gas exchange was correlated with the rise in plasma TNF activity, which reached a peak at 90 to 120 min in septic pigs. Our results provide evidence that both TNF subtypes are present in plasma during septicemia. Anti-TNF-alpha and anti-TNF-beta neutralized TNF activity in whole septic plasma at 15, 30, and 45 min after onset of septicemia, and the antibodies blocked TNF activity in serially diluted septic plasma at all time points up to 210 min of sepsis. TNF activity in septic plasma at 210 to 300 min was not neutralized entirely by TNF antisera.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Tumor necrosis factor. Alpha and beta subtypes appear in circulation during onset of sepsis-induced lung injury. 202 17

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) facilitates superoxide production, and spin traps may detoxify superoxide by acting as superoxide dismutase mimics. We investigated the ability of a stable nitroxide spin trap, TEMPOL, to protect TNF-sensitive cells from exogenously added TNF. WEHI or L929 cells were incubated with TNF (500 units/ml) for 18 hr either simultaneously with 0 to 8 mM TEMPOL or with the TEMPOL added at varying intervals after TNF exposure. A dose-dependent increase in survival was noted in the TEMPOL-treated cells, with 92 +/- 2% survival of WEHIs treated with 4 mM TEMPOL compared to 26 +/- 1% survival for non-TEMPOL-exposed cells (P2 less than 0.01). Significant increases in survival could be accomplished with as late as 15-hr delayed addition of the compound. The mechanism of protection does not seem to involve newly synthesized protein, and Northern blot analysis revealed that TEMPOL does not induce the genes for MnSOD or Cu-ZnSOD. The ability of TEMPOL to protect against TNF injury, even when exposure is delayed, may prove useful in conditions thought to be associated with free radical-lymphokine interactions such as ischemia-reperfusion, oxygen toxicity, or sepsis.
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PMID:Spin trap protection from tumor necrosis factor cytotoxicity. 203 86

Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is a peptide secreted by macrophages in response to endotoxin that can produce many of the changes seen in septic shock. After cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) rats gradually develop tachycardia, hypotension, tachypnea, and hypothermia. At 5 h post-CLP, rats have a peak in serum levels of endotoxin and 60% of rats have blood cultures that grow Gram-negative rods (Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumonia). At 20 h post-CLP all rats develop positive blood cultures. Serum levels of TNF are not reproducibly measurable in rats following CLP. Rats undergoing CLP have a 50-80% mortality with deaths usually occurring 24-72 h postinjury. Repetitive (twice daily x 6 d) i.p. injection of sublethal doses of recombinant human TNF-alpha (100 micrograms/kg) to rats undergoing CLP 1 d after the treatment period resulted in a significant reduction in mortality compared to control rats previously unexposed to rTNF (P less than 0.03). Animals treated with rTNF had no hypotension or hypothermia after CLP and regained normal food intake faster than control rats. 12 h after CLP the gene expression for manganous superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), an inducible mitochondrial metalloenzyme responsible for cellular resistance to injury from toxic reactive oxygen species, was higher in livers of rats treated with rTNF suggesting that the TNF treatment augmented expression of this protective enzyme. Unlike MnSOD, expression of the gene for copper-zinc SOD was not affected by CLP or rTNF treatment. The results suggest that prior treatment with recombinant TNF can ameliorate the lethality, hypotension, hypothermia, and anorexia of Gram-negative sepsis in rats and that the mechanism may be related to enhanced hepatic expression of the gene for MnSOD. Repeated administration of recombinant TNF may be a strategy to minimize mortality and morbidity of Gram-negative sepsis.
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PMID:Treatment with recombinant human tumor necrosis factor-alpha protects rats against the lethality, hypotension, and hypothermia of gram-negative sepsis. 205 27


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