Effects of vasopressin and terlipressin in ovine septic shock on mesenteric blood flow and survival

Sebastian Rehberg, Christian Ertmer, Matthias Lange, Andrea Morelli, Hugo Van Aken, Martin Westphal
2007 Critical Care  
renal urea transporters during LPS-induced acute renal failure is mediated by proinflammatory cytokines and is independent from renal ischemia due to sepsis-induced hypotension. Background Studies reveal that regulatory T (T reg ) cells control immune responses; therefore these responses must be controlled to enable effective protection against infections and cancer. CCR4 knockout (CCR4 -/-) mice are more resistant to lipopolysaccharide shock. So, our aim is to study the mechanisms involved in
more » ... he resistance of CCR4 -/mice subjected to severe sepsis by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) and how T reg cells modulate this effect. Methods C57/BL6 mice were subjected to a CLP model, whereby the cecum was partially ligated and punctured nine times with a 21 G needle. Sham-operated mice were used as control. Mice subjected to CLP and sham surgery were treated with antibiotic from 6 hours after surgery until 3 days. Results CCR4 -/mice subjected to CLP presented an increase in the survival rate (78%) compared with wild-type mice (17%), and presented a marked improvement in the innate response concerning neutrophil migration to the peritoneum and lung, bacterial load and cytokine levels compared with wild-type mice. Besides, T reg cells from CCR4 -/-CLP mice did not inhibit proliferation of T effector cells as observed for T reg cells from wild CLP mice, at a proportional ratio of T effector:T reg cells. Interesting, T reg cells from CCR4 -/-CLP mice inhibit 30% of neutrophil migration to bronchoalveolar lavage when co-injected with fungal challenge as secondary infection in sham recipient mice, while the T reg cells from wild CLP mice inhibit 80%, much more than expected. Conclusion These results suggest that T reg cells from CCR4 -/mice did not present a suppressive response and this could be an important factor in their survival. These results are strong evidence for the role of T reg cells in immunosuppression following severe sepsis. P3 Abdominal sepsis: efficacy of passive immunotherapy
doi:10.1186/cc5998 fatcat:akluda7ufrcslc3jzhtyngpwh4