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Usage Information

Propranolol Antagonizes the Anti-Inflammatory Effect of Alcohol and Improves Survival of Infected Intoxicated Rabbits
R. Michael Buckley, … , Elvira S. Ventura, Rob Roy MacGregor
R. Michael Buckley, … , Elvira S. Ventura, Rob Roy MacGregor
Published September 1, 1978
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1978;62(3):554-559. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI109160.
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Research Article

Propranolol Antagonizes the Anti-Inflammatory Effect of Alcohol and Improves Survival of Infected Intoxicated Rabbits

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Abstract

We studied the effects of alcohol and propranolol on the course of peritonitis in rabbits. Induction of sterile peritonitis with normal saline led to a 50% augmentation of granulocyte adherence in normal rabbits, and a mean cumulative granulocyte count of 27,000/mm3 in peritoneal exudate by 8 h. Rabbits intoxicated with alcohol at the time of peritonitis induction maintained a granulocyte adherence below pretreatment values, and only delivered a cumulative mean of 12,000 granulocytes/mm3 into the peritoneal fluid. When intoxicated rabbits received propranolol intravenously at the time of intoxication, adherence increased above preperitonitis levels, and stayed significantly above values for animals given alcohol alone. In addition, the defect in granulocyte delivery was prevented by propranolol, resulting in a mean cumulative granulocyte count in peritoneal fluid of 24,000/mm3.

Authors

R. Michael Buckley, Elvira S. Ventura, Rob Roy MacGregor

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Usage data is cumulative from June 2024 through June 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
Text version 93 0
PDF 65 8
Scanned page 227 0
Citation downloads 64 0
Totals 449 8
Total Views 457
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