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Citations to this article

Prostacyclin Reversal of Lethal Endotoxemia in Dogs
Michael M. Krausz, … , David Shepro, Herbert B. Hechtman
Michael M. Krausz, … , David Shepro, Herbert B. Hechtman
Published April 1, 1981
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 1981;67(4):1118-1125. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI110125.
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Research Article

Prostacyclin Reversal of Lethal Endotoxemia in Dogs

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Abstract

Severe endotoxemia, a condition where microembolization and intravascular coagulation are thought to play important roles, was treated experimentally with prostacyclin (PGI2). In a study of 24 dogs, 8 control animals injected with 1.75 mg·kg−1 of endotoxin died within 24 h. Six animals given intravenous aspirin 100 mg/kg, 30 min after endotoxin died. 9 of 10 dogs infused with 100 ng PGI2·kg−1·min−1 for 3 h, given 30 min after the injection of endotoxin survived 24 h (P < 0.025). Injection of endotoxin resulted in a: (a) maximal 62% fall in mean arterial pressure (P < 0.001); (b) transient doubling of mean pulmonary arterial pressure (P < 0.001); (c) initial 70% drop in cardiac index (P < 0.001); (d) decline in blood platelets from 213,700 to 13,700/mm3 (P < 0.001), and leukocytes from 7,719 to < 750/mm3 (P < 0.001); (e) depressed urine output (P < 0.001); (f) 34% decrease in blood fibrinogen (P < 0.01) and an increase in fibrin degradation products > 50 μg/ml (P < 0.001); (g) fivefold increase in circulating cathepsin D titer (P < 0.005) and (h) increase in blood norepinephrine (P < 0.005), dopamine (P < 0.005), and epinephrine (P < 0.001). Aspirin treatment led to an increase in mean arterial pressure (P < 0.001) and mean pulmonary arterial pressure (P < 0.005), but cardiac index, urine flow, platelets, leukocytes, fibrin degradation products, and cathepsin D levels remained similar to untreated controls. After infusion of PGI2 there was a: (a) prompt increase of cardiac index to base-line levels; (b) late increase in mean arterial pressure (P < 0.005) after the discontinuation of PGI2 treatment (c) restoration of urine output; (d) increase in circulating platelets to levels still below base line but above untreated control animals (P < 0.05); (e) no effect on circulating leukocyte levels; (f) fall in fibrin degradation products to 11.2 μg/ml (P < 0.05); (g) decline in cathepsin D levels to values 60% lower than the untreated controls (P < 0.025); and (h) reduction in plasma norepinephrine levels to base line at 4 h (P < 0.005). Although the mode of PGI2 action is not clear, it is effective in the treatment of experimental endotoxemia.

Authors

Michael M. Krausz, Takayoshi Utsunomiya, Giora Feuerstein, John H. N. Wolfe, David Shepro, Herbert B. Hechtman

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