Literature DB >> 18486152

Cecal ligation and incision: an acute onset model of severe sepsis in rats.

Patrick Scheiermann1, Sandra Hoegl, Marc Revermann, Devan Ahluwalia, Johannes Zander, Kim A Boost, Thach Nguyen, Bernhard Zwissler, Heiko Muhl, Christian Hofstetter.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sepsis is a leading cause of death among critically ill patients. Up to now, severe sepsis with acute onset in animals has been induced mainly through injection of single bacteria species or endotoxin and not through a surgical procedure, which might adequately mirror the situation in septic patients. We therefore aimed to establish a surgical model of severe sepsis in rodents fulfilling international sepsis criteria.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty-eight anesthetized/ventilated Sprague Dawley rats underwent laparotomy and cecal mobilization. The cecum was either replaced into the abdomen (SHAM, n = 14) or the cecum and the mesenteric blood vessels were ligated, and the cecum was opened through a 1.5 cm blade incision (cecal ligation and incision, CLI, n = 14).
RESULTS: Within 390 min, mortality was 0% (SHAM) and 50% (CLI), respectively. Compared with SHAM, CLI resulted in a 43% reduction of mean arterial blood pressure and in severe metabolic acidosis as measured by arterial base excess and pH. CLI led to a 15-fold increase in mononuclear cell population and to a 5-fold accumulation of nitrite in peritoneal lavage. Abdominal swabs from the Douglas cavity in CLI-animals showed gram-positive and gram-negative bacterial growth on agar compared with sterile swabs from SHAM-animals. In CLI-animals, plasma IL-1beta level was increased to 435 pg/mL (SHAM: 10 pg/mL) and plasma IL-6 level to 19718 pg/mL (SHAM: 832 pg/mL).
CONCLUSIONS: CLI causes bacterial peritonitis with subsequent systemic inflammation and organ dysfunction. Thus, CLI mimics clinical sepsis and provides a surgical short term model of severe sepsis in rodents.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18486152     DOI: 10.1016/j.jss.2008.02.032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Surg Res        ISSN: 0022-4804            Impact factor:   2.192


  11 in total

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2.  Effect of omiganan on colonic anastomosis healing in a rat model of peritonitis.

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3.  Impact of melatonin receptor deletion on intracellular signaling in spleen cells of mice after polymicrobial sepsis.

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4.  Early septic shock induces loss of oxidative phosphorylation yield plasticity in liver mitochondria.

Authors:  Pierre Eyenga; Damien Roussel; Jérôme Morel; Benjamin Rey; Caroline Romestaing; Loic Teulier; Shey-Shing Sheu; Joelle Goudable; Claude Négrier; Jean Paul Viale
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5.  Effects of intravenous and inhaled levosimendan in severe rodent sepsis.

Authors:  Patrick Scheiermann; Devan Ahluwalia; Sandra Hoegl; Andrea Dolfen; Marc Revermann; Bernhard Zwissler; Heiko Muhl; Kim A Boost; Christian Hofstetter
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Review 10.  Experimental Abdominal Sepsis: Sticking to an Awkward but Still Useful Translational Model.

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Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 4.711

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