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Title: Ischemia-reperfusion injury in skeletal muscle: CD 18-dependent neutrophil-endothelial adhesion and arteriolar vasoconstriction. Author: Zamboni WA, Stephenson LL, Roth AC, Suchy H, Russell RC. Journal: Plast Reconstr Surg; 1997 Jun; 99(7):2002-7; discussion 2008-9. PubMed ID: 9180724. Abstract: The purpose of this study was to evaluate if the venular neutrophil-endothelial adhesion associated with ischemia-reperfusion of skeletal muscle is dependent on leukocyte adhesion glycoprotein CD18 function and to determine if this interaction influences the vasoactive response in nearby arterioles. An in vivo microscopy preparation of transilluminated gracilis muscle in 13 male Wistar rats was used for this experiment. Observations of nonischemic muscle (sham) demonstrated this preparation to be stable for 8 hours with negligible change in neutrophil adherence or arteriole diameter. Three groups were evaluated in this study: (1) sham, no ischemia, no treatment (n = 5, 20 arterioles. 20 venules), (2) 4 hours of global ischemia only (n = 4, 19 venules, 22 arterioles), and (3) 4 hours of ischemia plus monoclonal antibody against CD18 (n = 4, 12 venules, 9 arterioles). The murine monoclonal antibody (WT.3, Seikagaku America, Inc.), which binds the rat leukocyte function antigen I CD18 chain, was infused into the contralateral femoral vein 30 minutes prior to reperfusion. The number of leukocytes rolling and adherent to endothelium (15 seconds of observation) was counted in 100-microns venular segments, and arteriole diameters were measured at various times during reperfusion. All counts and measurements were normalized to baseline preischemic readings for each animal. Mean changes from baseline were compared between groups. The increase in ischemia-reperfusion-induced neutrophil-endothelial adherence in venules was blocked by monoclonal antibody, but rolling behavior was not changed. The ischemia-reperfusion-induced progressive vasoconstriction in arterioles was blocked by monoclonal antibody. These results suggest that (1) neutrophil-endothelial adherence function associated with ischemia-reperfusion in this model is CD18-dependent, (2) neutrophil rolling function does not appear to be dependent on CD18, and (3) neutrophil CD18 function is a prerequisite for ischemia-reperfusion-induced arteriolar vasoconstriction. These findings provide important mechanistic information that may help explain the deleterious microcirculatory events associated with ischemia-reperfusion injury skeletal muscle.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]