Sevransky Jonathan E, Parent Chantal, Cui Xizhong, Karzai Waheed, Fitz Yvonne, Banks Steven M, Gerstenberger Eric, Danner Robert L, Natanson Charles, Eichacker Peter Q
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Asthma and Allergy Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Trauma. 2004 Sep;57(3):618-25. doi: 10.1097/01.ta.0000105884.75782.4d.
Previously, neutrophil stimulation with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) pretreatment increased survival rates in canines challenged with intraperitoneal or intrabronchial Escherichia coli and in rats challenged with intrabronchial Staphylococcus aureus. We investigated whether G-CSF pretreatment would be beneficial with intravascular challenge in these models.
Animals were randomized to G-CSF or placebo pretreatment followed by intravenous E. coli challenge in canines (n = 24) or intravenous or intrabronchial S. aureus challenge in rats (n = 273). All animals were treated with antibiotics.
In canines, G-CSF before intravenous E. coli did not decrease mortality rates (7 of 12 [58%] G-CSF vs. 5 of 12 [42%] controls), which contrasted with prior reductions during extravascular infection (10 of 35 [29%] G-CSF vs. 37 of 65 [57%] controls). Consistent with the present and previously published studies in canines, in rats, G-CSF decreased mortality rates with intrabronchial S. aureus (22 of 90 [24%] G-CSF vs. 26 of 51 [51%] controls, p = 0.009) but did not decrease them with intravenous infection (34 of 67 [50%] G-CSF vs. 27 of 65 [42%] controls, p = 0.2) in patterns that were very different (p = 0.005 for the effects of G-CSF with intravascular vs. intrabronchial S. aureus).
In contrast to extravascular infection, sepsis with intravascular E. coli in canines and S. aureus in rats may not provide a compartmentalized nidus of bacteria on which G-CSF-stimulated neutrophils can exert a beneficial antimicrobial effect. Extrapolated clinically, a proinflammatory agent like G-CSF may be most beneficial with sepsis related primarily to a compartmentalized extravascular site of infection.
此前,用粒细胞集落刺激因子(G-CSF)预处理刺激中性粒细胞可提高经腹腔或支气管内注射大肠杆菌攻击的犬类以及经支气管内注射金黄色葡萄球菌攻击的大鼠的存活率。我们研究了在这些模型中,G-CSF预处理对血管内攻击是否有益。
将动物随机分为G-CSF预处理组或安慰剂预处理组,随后对犬类(n = 24)进行静脉注射大肠杆菌攻击,或对大鼠(n = 273)进行静脉或支气管内注射金黄色葡萄球菌攻击。所有动物均接受抗生素治疗。
在犬类中,静脉注射大肠杆菌前给予G-CSF并未降低死亡率(G-CSF组12只中有7只[58%]死亡,对照组12只中有5只[42%]死亡),这与血管外感染时死亡率降低形成对比(G-CSF组35只中有10只[29%]死亡,对照组65只中有37只[57%]死亡)。与目前及之前发表的犬类研究一致,在大鼠中,G-CSF降低了支气管内注射金黄色葡萄球菌后的死亡率(G-CSF组90只中有22只[24%]死亡,对照组51只中有26只[51%]死亡,p = 0.009),但对静脉感染未降低死亡率(G-CSF组67只中有34只[50%]死亡,对照组65只中有27只[42%]死亡,p = 0.2),两种模式差异非常显著(G-CSF对血管内与支气管内金黄色葡萄球菌作用的p值为0.005)。
与血管外感染不同,犬类血管内大肠杆菌败血症和大鼠血管内金黄色葡萄球菌败血症可能不会形成G-CSF刺激的中性粒细胞可发挥有益抗菌作用的局部细菌病灶。从临床推断,像G-CSF这样的促炎剂可能对主要与局部血管外感染部位相关的败血症最为有益。