Levenson S M, Gruber C A, Rettura G, Gruber D K, Demetriou A A, Seifter E
Ann Surg. 1984 Oct;200(4):494-512. doi: 10.1097/00000658-198410000-00011.
Acute radiation injury leads to thymic involution, adrenal enlargement, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, gastrointestinal ulceration, and impaired wound healing. The authors hypothesized that supplemental vitamin A would mitigate these adverse effects in rats exposed to acute whole-body radiation. This hypothesis was based on previous experiments in their laboratory that showed that supplemental vitamin A is thymotropic for normal rodents and lessens the thymic involution, lymphopenia, and adrenal enlargement that follows stress, trauma, and neoplasia, largely obviates the impaired wound healing induced by the radiomimetic drugs streptozotocin and cyclophosphamide, lessens the systemic response (thymic involution, adrenal enlargement, leukopenia, lymphocytopenia) to local radiation, and shifts the median lethal dose (LD50/30) following whole-body radiation to the right. To test their hypothesis, dorsal skin incisions and subcutaneous implantation of polyvinyl alcohol sponges were performed in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats at varying times following sham radiation or varying doses of whole-body radiation (175-850 rad). In each experiment, the control diet [which contains about 18,000 IU vit. A/kg chow (3 X the NRC RDA for normal rats)] was supplemented with 150,000 IU vit. A/kg diet beginning at, before, or after sham radiation and wounding or radiation and wounding. The supplemental vitamin A prevented the impaired wound healing and lessened the weight loss, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, thymic involution, adrenal enlargement, decrease in splenic weight, and gastric ulceration of the radiated (750-850 rad) wounded rats. This was true whether the supplemental vitamin A was begun before (2 or 4 days) or after (1-2 hours to 4 days) radiation and wounding; the supplemental vitamin A was more effective when started before or up to 2 days after radiation and wounding. The authors believe that prevention of the impaired wound healing following radiation by supplemental vitamin A is due to its enhancing the early inflammatory reaction to wounding, including increasing the number of monocytes and macrophages at the wound site; possible effect on modulating collagenase activity; effect on epithelial cell (and possible mesenchymal cell) differentiation; stimulation of immune responsiveness; and lessening of the adverse effects of radiation.
急性辐射损伤会导致胸腺萎缩、肾上腺增大、白细胞减少、血小板减少、胃肠道溃疡以及伤口愈合受损。作者推测,补充维生素A可减轻暴露于急性全身辐射的大鼠的这些不良反应。这一推测基于他们实验室之前的实验,该实验表明,补充维生素A对正常啮齿动物具有促胸腺作用,可减轻应激、创伤和肿瘤形成后出现的胸腺萎缩、淋巴细胞减少和肾上腺增大,在很大程度上消除由放射模拟药物链脲佐菌素和环磷酰胺引起的伤口愈合受损,减轻对局部辐射的全身反应(胸腺萎缩、肾上腺增大、白细胞减少、淋巴细胞减少),并使全身辐射后的半数致死剂量(LD50/30)右移。为了验证他们的推测,在假辐射或不同剂量的全身辐射(175 - 850拉德)后的不同时间,对麻醉的斯普拉格 - 道利大鼠进行背部皮肤切口和聚乙烯醇海绵皮下植入。在每个实验中,对照饮食[每千克食物含约18,000国际单位维生素A(正常大鼠的美国国家研究委员会推荐膳食摄入量的3倍)]从假辐射和创伤或辐射和创伤之前开始补充150,000国际单位维生素A/千克饮食。补充维生素A可防止辐射(750 - 850拉德)创伤大鼠的伤口愈合受损,并减轻体重减轻、白细胞减少、血小板减少、胸腺萎缩、肾上腺增大、脾脏重量减轻和胃溃疡。无论补充维生素A是在辐射和创伤之前(2天或4天)还是之后(1 - 2小时至4天)开始,情况都是如此;在辐射和创伤之前或之后2天内开始补充维生素A时效果更佳。作者认为,补充维生素A预防辐射后伤口愈合受损是由于其增强了对创伤的早期炎症反应,包括增加伤口部位的单核细胞和巨噬细胞数量;对调节胶原酶活性的可能作用;对上皮细胞(以及可能的间充质细胞)分化的作用;刺激免疫反应;以及减轻辐射的不良反应。