Artículos de revistas
Pretreatment Combination Reduces Remote Organ Damage Secondary to Intestinal Reperfusion Injury in Mice: Follow-up Study
Fecha
2016-01Registro en:
Stringa, Pablo Luis; Lausada, Natalia Raquel; Romanin, David Emmanuel; Portiansky, Enrique Leo; Zanuzzi, Carolina Natalia; et al.; Pretreatment Combination Reduces Remote Organ Damage Secondary to Intestinal Reperfusion Injury in Mice: Follow-up Study; Elsevier Science Inc; Transplantation Proceedings; 48; 1; 1-2016; 210-216
0041-1345
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Stringa, Pablo Luis
Lausada, Natalia Raquel
Romanin, David Emmanuel
Portiansky, Enrique Leo
Zanuzzi, Carolina Natalia
Machuca, Mariana Alejandra
Gondolesi, Gabriel Eduardo
Rumbo, Martín
Resumen
Background. Intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injury occurs after different surgical treatments, including intestinal transplantation. This harmful process may have an effect in remote organs, leading to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and death. Therefore, to establish strategies to attenuate local and remote damage constitutes a challenge for experimental and clinical surgeons in the intestinal surgical field. Methods. We evaluated the effect of ischemic preconditioning and tacrolimus pretreatment applied alone and in combination against local and remote damage caused by prolonged intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injury in a mouse model of warm ischemia. Results. Ischemic preconditioning applied alone and in combination with tacrolimus decreased histological damage (P < .05), number of apoptotic cells (P < .05), nitrosative stress (P < .01), and serum lactate dehydrogenase activity (P < .05) and lowered uremia (P < .05) compared with untreated post-reperfused intestines. Regarding remote organ damage, combination therapy was the unique condition able to attenuate lung (mainly neutrophil infiltration and hemorrhage), liver (sinusoidal congestion and hepatic vacuolization), and kidney (acute tubular necrosis and hydropic degeneration) histological alterations (P < .05), compared with the untreated group. Conclusions. These results support the application of these strategies in combination to minimize the impact of ischemia-reperfusion injury in the whole organism as a strategy to prevent multiple organ dysfunction syndromes and minimize the clinical impact