Inhaled NO as a viable antiadhesive therapy for ischemia/reperfusion injury of distal microvascular beds.

A Fox-Robichaud, D Payne, SU Hasan… - The Journal of …, 1998 - Am Soc Clin Investig
A Fox-Robichaud, D Payne, SU Hasan, L Ostrovsky, T Fairhead, P Reinhardt, P Kubes
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1998Am Soc Clin Investig
Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) is being used more and more in intensive care units as a modality
to improve the outcome of patients with pulmonary complications. Our objective was to
demonstrate that inhaled NO could impact upon a distally inflamed microvasculature-
improving perfusion, leukocyte adhesive interactions, and endothelial dysfunction. Using
intravital microscopy to visualize ischemia/reperfusion of postcapillary venules, we were
able to demonstrate that the reduction in perfusion, the dramatic increase in leukocyte …
Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) is being used more and more in intensive care units as a modality to improve the outcome of patients with pulmonary complications. Our objective was to demonstrate that inhaled NO could impact upon a distally inflamed microvasculature-improving perfusion, leukocyte adhesive interactions, and endothelial dysfunction. Using intravital microscopy to visualize ischemia/reperfusion of postcapillary venules, we were able to demonstrate that the reduction in perfusion, the dramatic increase in leukocyte rolling, adhesion, and emigration, and the endothelial dysfunction could all be significantly abrogated with 80 ppm, but not 20 ppm inhaled NO. Perfusing whole blood directly over an inert P-selectin and CD18 ligand substratum incorporated in a flow chamber recruited the same number of rolling and adhering leukocytes from NO-ventilated and non-NO-ventilated animals, suggesting that inhaled NO was not directly affecting leukocytes. To demonstrate that inhaled NO was actually reaching the peripheral microvasculature in vivo, we applied a NO synthase inhibitor locally to the feline mesentery and demonstrated that the vasoconstriction, as well as leukocyte recruitment, were essentially abolished by inhaled NO, suggesting that a NO-depleted peripheral microvasculature could be replenished with inhaled NO in vivo. Finally, inhaled NO at the same concentration that was effective in ischemia/reperfusion did not affect vascular alterations, leukocyte recruitment, and endothelial dysfunction associated with endotoxemia in the feline mesentery. In conclusion, our data for the first time demonstrate a role for inhaled NO as a therapeutic delivery system to the peripheral microvasculature, showing tremendous efficacy as an antiadhesive, antivasoconstrictive, and antipermeabilizing molecule in NO-depleted tissues, but not normal microvessels or vessels that have an abundance of NO (LPS-treated). The notion that blood borne molecules have NO carrying capacity is conceptually consistent with our observations.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation