| Literature DB >> 25328284 |
Lars Hållström1, Claes Frostell2, Anders Herrlin3, Eva Lindroos4, Ingrid Lundberg4, Anne Soop1.
Abstract
Nitric oxide donors and inhaled nitric oxide (iNO) may decrease ischemia/reperfusion injury as reported in animal and human models. We investigated whether the attenuation of reperfusion injury, seen by others, in patients undergoing knee arthroplasty could be reproduced when patients had spinal anesthesia. 45 consecutive patients were randomized into three groups (n = 15). Groups 1 and 3 were receiving iNO 80 ppm or placebo (nitrogen, N2) throughout the entire operation, and group 2 only received iNO in the beginning and at the end of the operation. Blood samples were collected before surgery, at the end of the surgery, and 2 hours postoperatively. Muscle biopsies were taken from quadriceps femoris muscle before and after ischemia. There were no increases in plasma levels of soluble adhesion molecules: ICAM, VCAM, P-selectin, E-selectin, or of HMGB1, in any of the groups. There were low numbers of CD68+ macrophages and of endothelial cells expression of ICAM, VCAM, and P-selectin in the muscle analyzed by immunohistochemistry, prior to and after ischemia. No signs of endothelial cell activation or inflammatory response neither systemically nor locally could be detected. The absence of inflammatory response questions this model of ischemia/reperfusion, but may also be related to the choice of anesthetic method EudraCTnr.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25328284 PMCID: PMC4189934 DOI: 10.1155/2014/620281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Patient characteristics.
| Group 1 (iNO) | Group 2 (piNO) | Group 3 (placebo) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patients, | 15 | 15 | 15 |
| Gender (F/M) | 8♀/7♂ | 10♀/5♂ | 13♀/2♂ |
| Mean age, years | 63 ± 14 | 65 ± 9 | 64 ± 9 |
| Mean BMI | 27.3 ± 4.6 | 29.8 ± 6.1 | 30.8 ± 5.4 |
| Tourniquet time, min | 101 ± 20 | 103 ± 19 | 95 ± 19 |
| Total duration of surgery, min | 170 ± 31 | 168 ± 20 | 156 ± 32 |
| Total time of iNO, min | 196 ± 36 | 97 ± 16 | — |
iNO: inhaled nitric oxide, piNO: partial iNO. Groups 1 (iNO) and 3 (placebo, N2) received iNO 80 ppm or placebo throughout the entire operation, whereas group 2 (piNO) received iNO 80 ppm in the beginning and at the end of the operation, with a break in iNO administration during the period of activated tourniquet. Values are expressed as mean ± SD if not stated otherwise.
Figure 1Flow diagram. iNO: inhaled nitric oxide, N2: nitrogen (placebo). Groups 1 (iNO) and 3 (placebo) received iNO 80 ppm or placebo (N2) throughout the entire operation. Group 2 (piNO) has a break in NO administration during the period of activated tourniquet and administration of NO restarts approximately 2 minutes before the tourniquet release.
Figure 2Effects on soluble adhesion molecules and HMGB1 in plasma. A significant decrease in ICAM was observed in group 1 (iNO) at time point 3 (two hours after tourniquet release) and in group 3 (placebo) at time points 2 (at the end of operation) and 3. No differences were observed between the groups. *P < 0.05 compared with baseline. Mean ± SEM.
Figure 3Correlation between percental change (blood sample at time points one and two) and ischemic time, exemplified by soluble P-selectin (all three groups). R 2 = 0.0048, ns.
Figure 4There was a significant increase in methemoglobin levels compared with baseline for the iNO treated patients and a significant difference over time in contrast to the placebo treated (*P < 0.05); also, a significant difference between the two iNO groups was observed (# P < 0.05). Groups 1 (iNO) and 3 (placebo, N2) received iNO 80 ppm or placebo throughout the entire operation, whereas group 2 (piNO) only received iNO 80 ppm in the beginning and at the end of the operation. Time point 1; before the spinal anesthesia, time point 2; before tourniquet activation, and time point 3; after tourniquet release. Mean ± SEM.