Literature DB >> 1699920

Administration of a synthetic antiprotease reduces smoke-induced lung injury.

G D Niehaus1, R Kimura, L D Traber, D N Herndon, J T Flynn, D L Traber.   

Abstract

Our previous studies suggest that a neutrophil-mediated inflammatory injury causes a major fraction of the pulmonary edema that occurs after smoke inhalation. Because activated neutrophils extrude cytotoxic proteases, the current study was conducted to evaluate the role of proteases in the pulmonary microvascular injury. Twelve sheep, instrumented for collection of lung lymph, were insufflated with cotton smoke. The sheep were treated 30 min after smoke inhalation with either gabexate mesilate (an inhibitor of serine proteases) or vehicle. Smoke inhalation resulted in an increased protease activity in the lung interstitium, as evidenced by decreases in both antiprotease activity and immunoreactive alpha 2-macroglobulin. Intravenous infusion of gabexate mesilate prevented the decrease in antiprotease activity. The protease inhibitor significantly attenuated the smoke-induced increase in transvascular fluid and protein flux, with untreated animals exhibiting 460% increases in flux compared with 180% in the inhibitor treated sheep. The protease inhibitor also eliminated the functional degradation in gas exchange that was observed in the untreated sheep. These studies strongly suggest that an increase in pulmonary proteolytic enzyme activity is responsible for a significant fraction of the degradation in microvascular integrity and gas exchange that is associated with smoke inhalation injury.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 1699920     DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1990.69.2.694

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  8 in total

1.  Smoke-induced inhalation injury: effects of retinoic acid and antisense oligodeoxynucleotide on stability and differentiated state of the mucociliary epithelium.

Authors:  S N Bhattacharyya; B Manna; R Smiley; P Ashbaugh; R Coutinho; B Kaufman
Journal:  Inflammation       Date:  1998-04       Impact factor: 4.092

Review 2.  Intensive care.

Authors:  S Sinclair; M Singer
Journal:  Postgrad Med J       Date:  1993-05       Impact factor: 2.401

Review 3.  Inhalation Injury in the Burned Patient.

Authors:  Guillermo Foncerrada; Derek M Culnan; Karel D Capek; Sagrario González-Trejo; Janos Cambiaso-Daniel; Lee C Woodson; David N Herndon; Celeste C Finnerty; Jong O Lee
Journal:  Ann Plast Surg       Date:  2018-03       Impact factor: 1.539

4.  Tracheobronchial protease inhibitors, body surface area burns, and mortality in smoke inhalation.

Authors:  Margaret Kurzius-Spencer; Kevin Foster; Sally Littau; Karen J Richey; Beth M Clark; Duane Sherrill; Scott Boitano; Daniel M Caruso; Jefferey L Burgess
Journal:  J Burn Care Res       Date:  2009 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 1.845

5.  In vivo effect of wood smoke on the expression of two mucin genes in rat airways.

Authors:  Sambhu N Bhattacharyya; Michael A Dubick; Loudon D Yantis; John I Enriquez; Kelvin C Buchanan; Surinder K Batra; Rebecca A Smiley
Journal:  Inflammation       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 4.092

Review 6.  Current treatment of severely burned patients.

Authors:  T T Nguyen; D A Gilpin; N A Meyer; D N Herndon
Journal:  Ann Surg       Date:  1996-01       Impact factor: 12.969

7.  Effects of gabexate mesilate on ischemia-reperfusion-induced testicular injury in rats.

Authors:  Ayten Gezici; Hayrettin Ozturk; Huseyin Buyukbayram; Hulya Ozturk; Hanifi Okur
Journal:  Pediatr Surg Int       Date:  2006-03-24       Impact factor: 1.827

Review 8.  Pathophysiology, research challenges, and clinical management of smoke inhalation injury.

Authors:  Perenlei Enkhbaatar; Basil A Pruitt; Oscar Suman; Ronald Mlcak; Steven E Wolf; Hiroyuki Sakurai; David N Herndon
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2016-10-01       Impact factor: 79.321

  8 in total

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