Prostaglandin and tumor necrosis factor levels in early wound inflammatory fluid: effects of parenteral omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acid administration.
Клучни зборови
Апстракт
Monokines are important mediators of wound healing. Specifically, the proportions of proinflammatory (tumor necrosis factor and PGE2) and antiinflammatory (PGF2 alpha) monokines may modulate its early phases. Using a polyvinyl alcohol sponge model of rat wounding, the authors determined the temporal changes in the levels of monokines in wound inflammatory fluid, and examined whether dietary manipulation for 6 days with the precursors (omega 6 fatty acids) and inhibitors (fish oil omega 3 fatty acids) of the prostaglandin-2 series influenced monokine composition of wound fluid. For 3 days before the wounding, adult rats received isocaloric, isovolemic, and isonitrogenous total parenteral nutrition (TPN), in which lipids supplied either 35% (Intralipid [IL] or fish oil emulsion [FO]) or 8% (minimal essential fatty acid; EFA) of the total calories. Control rats received isocaloric enteral chow. The controls were studied at 24, 48, 72, and 96 hours, and the experimentals at 72 hours after wounding. Cell counts were performed, and cell-free fluid was analyzed for PGE2, PGF2 alpha, and TNF. In control rats, the total WBC count was highest at 24 to 48 hours, and decreased significantly by 96 hours. The percentage of mononuclear cells progressively increased throughout the 96 hours, and the total mononuclear cell count peaked at 72 hours. The TNF and prostaglandin levels were highest at 24 hours; these decreased rapidly by 72 hours. At all time-points, the levels of PGE2 remained higher than those of PGF2 alpha.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)