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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, July 1998, p. 543-549, Vol. 5, No. 4
North Western Injury Research Centre,
University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom
Received 24 November 1997/Returned for modification 2 March
1998/Accepted 11 May 1998
The effects of three resuscitation fluids, hydroxyethyl starch
(HES), Haemaccel, and fresh autologous blood, on reticuloendothelial system phagocytic and catabolic functions and resistance to infection after 40% hemorrhages in BALB/c mice were studied. The mice,
anesthetized with isoflurane, were bled over a 10-min period, left
hypovolemic for 30 min, and then resuscitated with their shed blood or
the same volume of asanguineous fluid. Normothermia was maintained throughout the experiments. The uptake and catabolism of intravenously injected double-labelled sheep erythrocytes
(51Cr-125I-SRBC) in liver and spleen were
determined at 1 and 48 h after hemorrhage. No significant changes
in the uptake or catabolism of SRBC in liver or spleen were found at
1 h after hemorrhage and resuscitation with any of the fluids.
However, at 48 h a significant increase in liver uptake of SRBC
was seen in animals resuscitated with either Haemaccel or HES compared
to that in animals resuscitated with shed blood or in animals subjected
to a sham operation. The increase in liver uptake was accompanied by a
small decrease in spleen uptake in animals resuscitated with Haemaccel
but not with HES. No great changes in catabolic activity were seen at
48 h, although activity levels tended to be higher in animals
resuscitated with Haemaccel. Separate groups of animals were challenged
by an intraperitoneal injection with live Escherichia coli
at 1 or 48 h after hemorrhage and resuscitation. Sixty-four
percent of the animals resuscitated with shed blood survived the
challenge with E. coli at 1 h after hemorrhage,
whereas only 10 and 0% survival was seen for animals resuscitated with
Haemaccel and HES, respectively. At 48 h survival was 80% for
shed-blood-resuscitated animals and 60 and 70% for Haemaccel- and
HES-resuscitated animals, respectively.
1071-412X/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Effects of Colloidal Resuscitation Fluids on
Reticuloendothelial Function and Resistance to Infection after
Hemorrhage
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: NWIRC, Stopford
Building, University of Manchester, Oxford Rd., Manchester M13 9PT, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 (0)161 275 5183. Fax: 44 (0)161 275 5190.
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