| Literature DB >> 33967752 |
Yanxia Gao1, Linlin Hou1, Yibo Wang1, Yan Zhang1, Shoutao Zhang2, Yi Li3, Yanan Jiang4, Changju Zhu1, Tongwen Sun1, Guoyu Duan1, Ding Yuan1.
Abstract
It is noted that elevated serum amylase levels suggesting pancreatic damage has an association with prognosis in PQ patients. This study aimed to determine whether PQ can cause pancreatic damage. The two conventional models (intragastric infusion (iG) and intraperitoneal injection (iP)) may exhibit different effects on the pancreas depending on whether or not they pass through the digestive tract. In this study, the rats were divided into four groups: the intragastric infusion group (PQ-iG, n = 45), intraperitoneal injection group (PQ-iP, n = 53), normal control group 1 (NC-iG, n = 6) and normal control group 2 (NC-iP, n = 6). Pancreatic damage was compared between groups using serum amylase activity assay, hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) staining, TUNEL assay, and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Serum amylase levels in group PQ-iG were significantly higher than in group PQ-iP (p < 0.05). Examination of the H&E sections showed damage to the pancreas. Both experimental groups were displayed inflammatory infiltration within 9 h of PQ treatment. After 9 h, patchy necrosis was observed in group PQ-iP, when inflammatory infiltration was still the dominant pathology. Necrosis appeared and gradually worsened in group PQ-iG, in which necrosis was the dominant pathology. The TUNEL assay showed significantly higher numbers of apoptotic cells in the pancreas of PQ-groups than in the control NC- groups (p < 0.05). TEM showed expansive endoplasmic reticulum lumens and mitochondria swelling in the pancreas of the PQ-groups. It is concluded that both methods of modeling could cause pancreatic damage and the type and degree of damage would change over time. Note that pancreatic damage in group PQ-iG was more severe than that in group PQ-iP. Therefore, clinical practitioners should pay close attention to pancreatic damage caused by PQ, especially when the route of PQ administration was oral.Entities:
Keywords: intragastric infusion; intraperitoneal injection; multiple organ damage; pancreatic damage; paraquat poisoning
Year: 2021 PMID: 33967752 PMCID: PMC8099104 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.611433
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Survival curves of rats in all groups after PQ administration.
FIGURE 2Changes in the pancreas due to iG and iP administration of PQ. (A) Typical pathological changes in H&E stained pancreatic tissue sections in groups PQ-iG and PQ-iP at various times of observation (magnification ×200; scale bar: 100 μm; black arrow = inflammatory cell infiltration; yellow arrow = necrotic cell; red arrow = hemorrhage); (B) Pathological damage scores of rat pancreas in groups PQ-iG and PQ-iP at each observation time point; (C) Serum amylase activity ( nmole/ min/ ml) of rats in groups PQ-iG and PQ-iP. The corresponding NC- groups values were taken for 0 h after PQ treatment. * p < 0.05: the difference between the PQ-iG and PQ-iP groups was statistically significant at this time point; # p < 0.05: the difference was statistically significant in comparison with the corresponding NC group. PQ paraquat; iG: intragastric infusion; iP: intraperitoneal injection.
FIGURE 3TUNEL staining assay was used to determine apoptosis in pancreatic tissue. (A) Typical TUNEL assay results for pancreatic tissue in each group (magnification ×200); (B) TUNEL stained apoptotic cell numbers. # p < 0.05: the difference was statistically significant when compared to the corresponding NC- group.
FIGURE 4Typical TEM photos of pancreatic tissue sections (bar = 2 μm or 200 nm); N: nucleus, mt: mitochondria, black arrow: mitochondria, ER: endoplasmic reticulum, TEM: transmission electron microscopy, NC: normal control, PQ: paraquat poisoning, iG: intragastric infusion, iP: intraperitoneal injection.