| Literature DB >> 32662306 |
Ning Li1,2, Xinyue Wang1,2, Pengtao Wang2,3, Haojun Fan1,2, Shike Hou1,2, Yanhua Gong1,2.
Abstract
Crush injury is a disease that is commonly found in victims of earthquakes, debris flows, mine disasters, explosions, terrorist attacks, local wars, and other accidents. The complications that arise due to the crush injury inflicted on victims give rise to crush syndrome (CS). If not treated in time, the mortality rate of CS is very high. The most important measure that can be taken to reduce mortality in such situations is to immediately start treatment. However, the traditional treatment methods such as fluid resuscitation, diuresis, and hemodialysis are not feasible enough to be carried out at the disaster scene. So there is a need for developing new treatments that are efficient and convenient. Because it is difficult to diagnose in the disaster area and reach the treatment equipment and treat on time. It has become a new research needs to be directed into identifying new medical treatment targets and methods using the etiology and pathophysiological mechanisms of CS. In recent years, a large number of new anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory drug therapies have been shown to be highly efficacious in CS rat/mouse models. Some of them are expected to become specific drugs for the emergency treatment of a large number of patients who may develop CS in the aftermath of earthquakes, wars, and other disasters in the future. Hence, we have reviewed the latest research on the medical therapy of CS as a source for anyone wishing to pursue research in this direction.Entities:
Keywords: Crush injury; acute kidney injury; crush syndrome; disaster medicine; medical therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32662306 PMCID: PMC7470165 DOI: 10.1080/0886022X.2020.1792928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ren Fail ISSN: 0886-022X Impact factor: 2.606
Detail information of different drug for crush syndrome therapy.
| Drug category | Drug/strategy | Protective mechanism | Specie | Author | Author Country | Journal Year | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chemical drugs | Mitochondria-targeted anti-oxidants (SkQR1) | Anti-oxidant, activate ischemia pre-processing signal pathway | - | Koyner et al. | USA | 2008 | [ |
| Dexamethasone | Anti-inflammatory, reduce IRI through the PI3K-Akt-eNOS signal pathway | Rat | Murata et al. | Japan | 2016 | [ | |
| Allopurinol | Reduce oxidative stress, inhibit apoptosis, reduce inflammatory cell infiltration, increase cell proliferation | Rat | Gois et al. | Brazil | 2016 | [ | |
| Nitrite | Inhibit IRI relate to NO | Rat | Murata et al. | Japan | 2012 | [ | |
| Anisodamine | Activate α7nAChR, reduce serum potassium, inhibit HMGB1 | Mouse | Yu et al. | China | 2019 | [ | |
| Astragaloside-IV | Anti-oxidant, prevent mitochondrial dysfunction and inflammation response | Rat | Murata et al. | Japan | 2017 | [ | |
| Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) | Anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, and anti-apoptotic | Rat | Teksen et al. | Turkey | 2019 | [ | |
| Bardoxolone methyl (BM) | Anti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, anti-apoptotic | Rat | Kadioglu et al. | Turkey | 2019 | [ | |
| N-(2-hydroxyphenyl) acetamide | Downregulate (COX-2, NF-κB , iNOS), upregulate (HO-1, KIM-1), aiti-inflammatory, anti-oxidant, retain the renal tubule brush border and actin cytoskeleton | Mouse | Siddiqui et al. | Pakistan | 2019 | [ | |
| Ulinastatin | Reduce inflammation, regulate the balance between Th17 and Treg cells | Rat | Yang et al. | China | 2020 | [ | |
| Biological agents | Recombinant human erythropoietin (rhEPO) | Inhibit NF-κB and iNOS, regulate TLR4/NF-κB to promote M2 macrophages phenotypes | Rat | Yang et al. | Taiwan | 2012 | [ |
| Macrophage surface molecule Mac-1 inhibitor: Lactoferrin (Lf) | Prevent platelet-mediated MET formation and related renal tubular injury | Mouse | Okubo et al. | Japan | 2018 | [ | |
| Antibody treatment | Anti-HMGB1 antibody | Blocking HMGB1, reduce inflammatory response and renal cortical cell apoptosis | Rat | Shimazaki et al. | Japan | 2012 | [ |
| Anti-RAGE Antibody | Reduce inflammatory response, prevent the development of MOF | Rat | Matsumoto et al. | Japan | 2017 | [ | |
| Cell therapy | Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) treatment | Promote M2 macrophages phenotype | - | Almeida et al. | Brazil | 2013 | [ |
| Carbon monoxide-enriched red blood cell (CO-RBC) | Reduce the oxidation, degrade cytochrome P450, inhibit free heme and hemoglobin | Rat | Taguchi et al. | Japan | 2020 | [ | |
| Other treatment | Icing treatment | Inhibiting the increase of blood potassium concentrations and suppress acute inflammation reaction | Rat | Murata et al. | Japan | 2020 | [ |
Abbreviation: SkQR1: Mitochondria-targeted anti-oxidants; IRI: ischemia/reperfusion injury; H2S: hydrogen sulfide; BM: Bardoxolone methyl; COX-2: Cyclooxygenase-2; NF-κB: Nuclear factor kappa-B; iNOS: Inducible nitric oxide synthase; HO-1: Heme oxygenase-1; KIM-1: Kidney injury molecule-1; rhEPO: Recombinant human erythropoietin; HMGB1: High mobility group box 1 protein; RAGE: Receptor for advanced glycation endproducts; MOF: multiple organ failure; MSC: Mesenchymal stem cells; CO-RBC: Carbon monoxide-enriched red blood cell.