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Title: Phospholipase A2 inhibition decouples lung injury from gut ischemia-reperfusion. Author: Koike K, Moore EE, Moore FA, Carl VS, Pitman JM, Banerjee A. Journal: Surgery; 1992 Aug; 112(2):173-80. PubMed ID: 1322564. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Phospholipase A2 (PLA2) has recently been implicated as a key enzyme of local inflammation after gut ischemia-reperfusion (I/R). The hypothesis of this study is that PLA2 inhibition decouples remote organ injury from gut I/R. METHODS: Sprague-Dawley rats were pretreated with a PLA2 inhibitor, quinacrine (10 mg/kg, intravenously), before the induction of gut ischemia (45 minutes of superior mesenteric artery occlusion) followed by 6 hours of reperfusion. 125I-labeled albumin leak was employed as a marker of pulmonary endothelial permeability and myeloperoxidase as a monitor of neutrophil (PMN) traffic in the gut and lung. To further characterize the impact of PLA2 inhibition, PMNs were harvested at 6 hours of reperfusion and superoxide production was measured in the presence or absence of an activating stimulus, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. RESULTS: Gut I/R increased gut PLA2 activity, elicited gut PMN influx, and produced lung leak; these events were prevented by PLA2 blockade. Gut I/R also markedly enhanced PMN superoxide production with N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine, and this priming was ablated by PLA2 inhibition. CONCLUSION: These data suggest that PLA2 activation is a proximal step in the pathogenesis of distant organ injury after splanchnic hypoperfusion, a process that appears to involve PMN priming in the gut bed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]