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Protection by Glycyrrhizin against Warm Ischemia‐Reperfusion–Induced Cellular Injury and Derangement of the Microcirculatory Blood Flow in the Rat Liver
Author(s) -
MABUCHI AYAKO,
WAKE KENJIRO,
MARLINI MUHAMAD,
WATANABE HITOMI,
WHEATLEY ANTONY M.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
microcirculation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.793
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1549-8719
pISSN - 1073-9688
DOI - 10.1080/10739680902796917
Subject(s) - glycyrrhizin , bleb (medicine) , microcirculation , ischemia , hepatocyte , liver injury , pathology , medicine , intravital microscopy , laser doppler velocimetry , perfusion , pharmacology , reperfusion injury , chemistry , blood flow , biochemistry , surgery , in vitro , trabeculectomy , intraocular pressure
Background/Aim: The mechanism by which ischemia‐reperfusion (I/R)‐induced derangement of the hepatic microcirculation leads to tissue injury is not fully understood. We postulated that alterations to the hepatic microcirculation, including hemodynamic derangement and increased leukocyte‐endothelium interaction, play a role, and that glycyrrhizin exerts its hepatoprotective effects, in part, by reducing these microcirculatory changes. Materials and Methods: Wistar rats were subjected to 30–60 minutes segmental hepatic ischemia, followed by 120 minutes of reperfusion. Glycyrrhizin was administered prior to ischemia. Using intravital fluorescence microscopy, the administration of fluorescein isothiocyanate–conjugated erythrocytes allowed the measurement of erythrocyte‐velocity (RBC vel ), lobular, and sinusoidal perfusion. Bleb formation was observed by electron microscopy. Blood and tissue were taken for the assessment of liver injury. Results: Glycyrrhizin reduced I/R‐induced liver injury (histology, liver enzymes) and reduced hepatocyte apoptosis (TUNEL, caspase‐3 activity). Glycyrrhizin inhibited hepatocyte bleb formation and reversed the I/R‐induced reductions in lobular perfusion and RBC vel . Leukocyte rolling and adherence in postsinusoidal venules and neutrophil infiltration were reduced by glycyrrhizin. I/R‐induced elevation in HMGB1 was prevented by glycyrrhizin. Conclusions: Early bleb formation with deranged microcirculatory flow and leukocyte‐endothelium interaction would appear to contribute to I/R‐induced hepatocellular injury. Glycyrrhizin exerts its hepatoprotective effect by preventing these changes, in addition to a direct cellular effect.