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  • Title: Hypertonic saline dextran attenuates leukocyte accumulation in the liver after hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation.
    Author: Corso CO, Okamoto S, Rüttinger D, Messmer K.
    Journal: J Trauma; 1999 Mar; 46(3):417-23. PubMed ID: 10088843.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation triggers a global ischemia/reperfusion phenomenon, in which activated leukocytes are considered strong contributors to the ensuing tissue damage. METHODS: The aim of the study was to investigate the effects of hypertonic saline dextran (HSD) on the early leukocyte/endothelial interactions (intravital fluorescence microscopy) in a rat model of hemorrhagic shock (1 hour at mean arterial pressure of 40 mm Hg). The resuscitation was performed with lactated Ringer's solution (RL, four times shed blood/20 minutes, n = 6), 6% dextran 60 (DEX, 100% shed blood/5 minutes, n = 8), and 7.2% NaCl/10% dextran 60 (HSD, 10% shed blood/2 minutes, n = 8). RESULTS: After 1 hour of resuscitation, shock-induced stasis/adherence of leukocytes was further enhanced with RL (sinusoids 17.6+/-6.9%; venules 33.9+/-8.5%), whereas DEX and HSD attenuated leukocyte stagnation in sinusoids (DEX -7.4+/-6,1%; HSD -14.7+/-2.9%, p<0.01 vs. RL) and leukocyte adherence in postsinusoidal venules (DEX -12.2+/-8.6%, p<0.05 vs. RL; HSD -27+/-7.4%, p<0.01 vs. RL). CONCLUSION: HSD reduced significantly the number of leukocytes accumulated in the liver after resuscitation of hemorrhagic shock, probably due to a combination of mechanisms of both components.
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