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Experimental lung injury induces cerebral cytokine mRNA production in pigs
Author(s) -
Jens Kamuf,
Andreas García Bardon,
Alexander Ziebart,
Katrin Frauenknecht,
Konstantin Folkert,
Johannes Schwab,
Robert Ruemmler,
Miriam Renz,
Denis Cana,
Serge C. Thal,
Erik K. Hartmann
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.10471
Subject(s) - ards , hippocampal formation , medicine , microglia , cytokine , apoptosis , lung , messenger rna , downregulation and upregulation , pathology , anesthesia , inflammation , biology , biochemistry , gene
Background Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is an important disease with a high incidence among patients admitted to intensive care units. Over the last decades, the survival of critically ill patients has improved; however, cognitive deficits are among the long-term sequelae. We hypothesize that acute lung injury leads to upregulation of cerebral cytokine synthesis. Methods After approval of the institutional and animal care committee, 20 male pigs were randomized to one of three groups: (1) Lung injury by oleic acid injection (OAI), (2) ventilation only (CTR) or (3) untreated. We compared neuronal numbers, proportion of neurons with markers for apoptosis, activation state of Iba-1 stained microglia cells and cerebral mRNA levels of different cytokines between the groups 18 hours after onset of lung injury. Results We found an increase in hippocampal TNFalpha ( p  < 0.05) and IL-6 ( p  < 0.05) messenger RNA (mRNA) in the OAI compared to untreated group as well as higher hippocampal IL-6 mRNA compared to control ( p  < 0.05). IL-8 and IL-1beta mRNA showed no differences between the groups. We found histologic markers for beginning apoptosis in OAI compared to untreated ( p  < 0.05) and more active microglia cells in OAI and CTR compared to untreated ( p  < 0.001 each). Conclusion Hippocampal cytokine transcription increases within 18 hours after the induction of acute lung injury with histological evidence of neuronal damage. It remains to be elucidated if increased cytokine mRNA synthesis plays a role in the cognitive decline observed in survivors of ARDS.

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