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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Acute alcohol intoxication increases interleukin-18-mediated neutrophil infiltration and lung inflammation following burn injury in rats.

Journal:
American journal of physiology. Lung cellular and molecular physiology
Year:
2007
Authors:
Li, Xiaoling et al.
Affiliation:
Center for Surgical Research and Department of Surgery · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

In this study, we examined whether IL-18 plays a role in lung inflammation following alcohol (EtOH) and burn injury. Male rats ( approximately 250 g) were gavaged with EtOH to achieve a blood EtOH level of approximately 100 mg/dl before burn or sham injury ( approximately 12.5% total body surface area). Immediately after injury, rats were treated with vehicle, caspase-1 inhibitor AC-YVAD-CHO to block IL-18 production or with IL-18 neutralizing anti-IL-18 antibodies. In another group, rats were treated with anti-neutrophil antiserum approximately 16 h before injury to deplete neutrophils. On day 1 after injury, lung tissue IL-18, neutrophil chemokines (CINC-1/CINC-3), ICAM-1, neutrophil infiltration, MPO activity, and water content (i.e., edema) were significantly increased in rats receiving a combined insult of EtOH and burn injury compared with rats receiving either EtOH intoxication or burn injury alone. Treatment of rats with caspase-1 inhibitor prevented the increase in lung tissue IL-18, CINC-1, CINC-3, ICAM-1, MPO activity, and edema following EtOH and burn injury. The increase in lung IL-18, MPO, and edema was also prevented in rats treated with anti-IL-18 antibodies. Furthermore, administration of anti-neutrophil antiserum also attenuated the increase in lung MPO activity and edema, but did not prevent the increase in IL-18 levels following EtOH and burn injury. These findings suggest that acute EtOH intoxication before burn injury upregulates IL-18, which in turn contributes to increased neutrophil infiltration. Furthermore, the presence of neutrophils appears to be critical for IL-18-meditaed increased lung tissue edema following a combined insult of EtOH and burn injury.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17220368/