Publication | Open Access
Dose‐Related Inflammatory Effects of Intravenous Endotoxin in Humans: Evaluation of a New Clinical Lot of<i>Escherichia coli</i>O:113 Endotoxin
150
Citations
12
References
1999
Year
New Clinical LotImmunotoxicologyHealthy SubjectsToxinologyImmunologyLot Ec-5Inflammatory EffectsInflammationIntravenous EndotoxinReference EndotoxinInflammatory MarkerSepsisToxicologyInfection ControlMicrobial ToxinAllergyChronic InflammationClinical MicrobiologyAntibioticsMedicine
The administration of reference endotoxin (Escherichia coli O:113, Lot EC-5) to humans has been an important means to study inflammation in vivo; however, the supply of Lot EC-5 is depleted. A new lot of reference endotoxin (Clinical Center reference endotoxin [CCRE]), derived from the original bulk material extracted from E. coli O:113, was processed. The effects of 0-, 1-, 2-, and 4-ng/kg doses of intravenous CCRE and EC-5 were studied in 20 male subjects. CCRE resulted in dose-related increases in symptoms, temperature (P=. 016), total leukocyte count (P=.014), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (P=.004), interleukin (IL)-1 receptor antagonist (P=.004), IL-6 (P=. 005), IL-8 (P=.011), cortisol (P<.05), and C-reactive protein (P=. 04). These responses were attenuated (all P<.012) in subjects given Lot EC-5 (4 ng/kg) in comparison with those in subjects given CCRE, showing that, over several years, EC-5 had lost potency. Thus, in healthy subjects, the magnitude of exposure to CCRE results in a graded dose response of major components of innate immunity.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1