Hypoxemia modifies circulating and exudate neutrophil number and functional responses in carrageenin-induced pleurisy in the rat.
Cuvinte cheie
Abstract
To assess the effect of hypoxemia on the responses of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) during an inflammatory response, rats were maintained in a low F1O2 atmosphere (9% O2) or room air for 12 h before intrathoracic injection of carrageenin or intradermal injections of agonists. After 4 h, hypoxemic rats had 50% more circulating PMN in blood and 25% less PMN in pleural exudate, whereas the number of PMN in skin biopsies did not differ from controls. Following hypoxemia, basal adhesion of blood PMN to serum-coated plastic wells was unchanged, whereas fMLP-stimulated adhesion was 50% greater. In contrast, basal adhesion of exudate PMN was 72% greater. In hypoxemic rats, exudate PMN produced 64% more PMA-stimulated superoxide than blood PMN; furthermore, blood and exudate PMN produced 4.5- and 2-fold more LPS-stimulated nitric oxide than controls, respectively. These results show that a moderate level of hypoxemia may trigger mechanisms that will interfere with PMN emigration yet prime these cells for enhanced responses upon stimulation.