Quezado Z, Parent C, Karzai W, Depietro M, Natanson C, Hammond W, Danner R L, Cui X, Fitz Y, Banks S M, Gerstenberger E, Eichacker P Q
Critical Care Medicine Department, Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA.
Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol. 2001 Oct;281(4):R1177-85. doi: 10.1152/ajpregu.2001.281.4.R1177.
We investigated whether decreases in circulating polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) during lethal Escherichia coli (E. coli) sepsis in canines are related to insufficient host granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF). Two-year-old purpose-bred beagles had intraperitoneal E. coli-infected or -noninfected fibrin clots surgically placed. By 10 to 12 h following clot, both infected survivors and nonsurvivors had marked increases (P = 0.001) in serum G-CSF levels (mean peak G-CSF ng/ml +/- SE, 1,931 +/- 364 and 2,779 +/- 681, respectively) compared with noninfected controls (134 +/- 79), which decreased at 24 to 48 h. Despite increases in G-CSF, infected clot placement caused delayed (P = 0.06) increases in PMN (mean +/- SE change from baseline in cells x 10(3)/mm(3) at 24 and 48 h) in survivors (+3.9 +/- 3.9 and +13.8 +/- 3.6) compared with noninfected controls (+13.1 +/- 2.8 and +9.1 +/- 2.5). Furthermore, infected nonsurvivors had decreases in PMN (-1.4 +/- 1.0 and -1.1 +/- 2.3, P = 0.006 compared with the other groups). We next investigated whether administration of G-CSF immediately after clot placement and continued for 96 h to produce more rapid and prolonged high levels of G-CSF after infection would alter PMN levels. Although G-CSF caused large increases in PMN compared with control protein from 2 to 48 h following clot in noninfected controls, it caused much smaller increases in infected survivors and decreases in infected nonsurvivors (P = 0.03 for the ordered effect of G-CSF comparing the three groups). Thus insufficient host G-CSF is unlikely the cause of decreased circulating PMN in this canine model of sepsis. Other factors associated with sepsis either alone or in combination with G-CSF itself may reduce increases or cause decreases in circulating PMN.
我们研究了犬类致死性大肠杆菌败血症期间循环多形核中性粒细胞(PMN)数量的减少是否与宿主粒细胞集落刺激因子(G-CSF)不足有关。对两岁的良种比格犬进行手术,在其腹腔内植入感染或未感染大肠杆菌的纤维蛋白凝块。植入凝块后10至12小时,与未感染的对照组(134±79)相比,感染的存活犬和非存活犬血清G-CSF水平均显著升高(P = 0.001)(平均峰值G-CSF ng/ml±标准误,分别为1,931±364和2,779±681),而在24至48小时时下降。尽管G-CSF水平升高,但与未感染的对照组(24小时和48小时时细胞×10³/mm³相对于基线的平均±标准误变化分别为+13.1±2.8和+9.1±2.5)相比,植入感染性凝块导致存活犬的PMN延迟升高(P = 0.06)(24小时和48小时时分别为+3.9±3.9和+13.8±3.6)。此外,感染的非存活犬的PMN数量减少(-1.4±1.0和-1.1±2.3,与其他组相比P = 0.006)。接下来,我们研究了在植入凝块后立即给予G-CSF并持续96小时,以在感染后产生更快、更持久的高水平G-CSF,是否会改变PMN水平。尽管与未感染对照组在植入凝块后2至48小时给予对照蛋白相比,G-CSF使PMN大幅增加,但在感染的存活犬中增加幅度小得多,而在感染的非存活犬中则减少(比较三组时G-CSF的有序效应P = 0.03)。因此,在这种犬类败血症模型中,宿主G-CSF不足不太可能是循环PMN减少的原因。与败血症单独或与G-CSF本身联合相关的其他因素可能会减少循环PMN的增加或导致其减少。