Evaluation of thyrotropin releasing hormone as a therapeutic intervention for endotoxemia
Autor: | Daniel J. Brackett, Megan R. Lerner, C. F. Schaefer, Lennart Fagraeus, John W. Holaday, Michael F. Wilson |
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Rok vydání: | 1990 |
Předmět: |
Male
Cardiac output medicine.medical_specialty Physiology medicine.medical_treatment Clinical Biochemistry Thyrotropin-releasing hormone Hemodynamics Peptide hormone Hematocrit Biochemistry Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience Endocrinology Heart Rate Internal medicine medicine Animals Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone Saline medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Rats Inbred Strains Shock Septic Rats Respiratory Function Tests Endotoxins Blood pressure medicine.anatomical_structure Vascular resistance Hypotension business |
Zdroj: | Regulatory Peptides. 29:153-162 |
ISSN: | 0167-0115 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0167-0115(90)90078-b |
Popis: | Thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) has been reported to reduce endotoxin-induced hypotension and mortality rate in conscious rats. Limited data are available to explain these effects. We evaluated hemodynamic parameters, metabolic function, tissue injury, and survival rate in three groups of instrumented conscious rats following intravenous endotoxin (20 mg/kg, LD/90-24 h) challenge. Pretreatment with TRH (2.0 mg/kg, i.v.) was administered 10 min before endotoxin (n = 10) and control (n = 10) animals were given an equivalent volume of saline. The post-treated group (n = 7) was given TRH at the nadir of the hypotensive response following endotoxin to duplicate published protocols. 5 min after endotoxin blood pressure and cardiac output were significantly higher in the post and pre-treatment groups, respectively, compared to the untreated group. There were no differences at other times. Systemic vascular resistance was not affected by either treatment mode at any time. TRH treatment following endotoxin resulted in transient increases in heart and respiration rates and decreased central venous pressure during the first 30 min. Metabolic function indicated by measurements of glucose, lactate, hematocrit, pH, PO2, and PCO2 at 60 and 240 min after endotoxin was not modified by TRH. The hemorrhagic small intestine characteristic of this model was not improved by either treatment mode. Mortality rates at 4 h after endotoxin were 20% for the untreated, 40% for the pre-treated, and 43% for the post-treated. These results suggest TRH exerts early transient effects on cardiovascular responses evoked by endotoxin in the conscious rat but no lasting beneficial effects were found to support the use of TRH as a mono-therapy for endotoxemia. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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