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Detection of Circulating Tumor Necrosis Factor after Endotoxin Administration
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1988
Year
ImmunologyPathologyInflammationBiomarker (Medicine)Translational MedicineTumor Necrosis FactorInflammatory MarkerSepsisClinical ChemistryInfection ControlLaboratory MedicineAutoimmune DiseaseStimulated MacrophagesVascular BiologyIbuprofen PretreatmentClinical MicrobiologyEndotoxin AdministrationCytokineHemostasisMedicine
Cytokines produced by activated macrophages are believed to mediate host responses to bacterial infection, yet consistent elevations of circulating cytokines in infected patients have not been observed. The study measured plasma cytokine concentrations and associated physiological and hormonal responses in healthy men after intravenous E. coli endotoxin and saline control. The experiment involved 13 subjects receiving endotoxin or saline, with an additional eight subjects pretreated with ibuprofen before the same interventions.
Cytokines, products of stimulated macrophages, are thought to mediate many host responses to bacterial infection, but increased circulating cytokine concentrations have not been detected consistently in infected patients. We measured plasma concentrations of circulating tumor necrosis factor alpha (cachectin), interleukin-1 beta, and gamma interferon, together with physiologic and hormonal responses, in 13 healthy men after intravenous administration of Escherichia coli endotoxin (4 ng per kilogram of body weight) and during a control period of saline administration. Eight additional subjects received ibuprofen before receiving endotoxin or saline. Plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor were generally less than 35 pg per milliliter throughout the control period, but increased 90 to 180 minutes after endotoxin administration to mean peak concentrations of 240 +/- 70 pg per milliliter, as compared with 35 +/- 5 pg per milliliter after saline administration. Host responses were temporally associated with the increase in circulating tumor necrosis factor at 90 minutes, and the extent of symptoms, changes in white-cell count, and production of ACTH were temporally related to the peak concentration of tumor necrosis factor. Ibuprofen pretreatment did not prevent the rise in circulating tumor necrosis factor (mean peak plasma level, 170 +/- 70 pg per milliliter) but greatly attenuated the symptoms and other responses after endotoxin administration. Concentrations of circulating interleukin-1 beta and gamma interferon did not change after endotoxin administration. We conclude that the response to endotoxin is associated with a brief pulse of circulating tumor necrosis factor and that the resultant responses are effected through the cyclooxygenase pathway.
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