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Title: Method for treatment and prevention of
physiological shock
United States Patent: 6,534,283
Issued: March 18, 2003
Inventors: Schmid-Schoenbein; Geert (Del Mar, CA); Hugli;
Tony (San Diego, CA); Mitsuoka; Hiroshi (Hamamatsu, JP)
Assignee: The Regents of the University of California
(Oakland, CA); The Scripps Institute (La Jolla, CA)
Appl. No.: 718783
Filed: November 22, 2000
Abstract
Shock is a life threatening complication in situations associated with
trauma including burns, surgery, ischemia, sepsis, and other critical care
applications. Shock is induced by pancreatic proteases when they are
released into the small intestine when the tissue is compromised due to
trauma. Administration of protease inhibitors into the small intestine,
either orally, intraveneously, or by direct lavage, was demonstrated to
prevent shock in rats as determined by both survival time and molecular and
histological analysis.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION AND PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Since the initiating factors of shock are released early (<1 hour) after
the initiation of shock and may not require de novo protein synthesis,
homogenates were prepared from several organs to identify these initiating
factors. Homogenates were tested for their ability to activate neutrophils,
a hallmark of shock. Male Wistar rats (250-350 gm) were housed in a
controlled environment and maintained on a standard pellet diet for at
least three days before the experiments. Access to food was maintained
until anesthesia to preserve pancreatic discharge. After general
anesthesia (pentobarbital, 50 mg/kg i.m.), the femoral arteries and veins
were cannulated. A central incision was made and the heart, liver, spleen,
small intestine, kidney, adrenal gland and pancreas were harvested.
The organs were immediately washed in cold 0.25 M sucrose solution,
homogenized in Krebs-Henseleit solution (1:3 w/v), and the homogenate was
diluted (1:2 v/v Krebs-Henseleit), following the protocol established by
Glen and Lefer (Circ. Res., 1971). This homogenate served as the stock
solution for all experiments. Aliquots were heated for 2.5 hours at
38oC. with mild stirring and the supernatant collected after
centrifugation at 500 g for 10 min. Incubation of tissue homogenates at
38oC. promotes enzymatic activity and enhances production of the
cellular activation factors.
It was expected that initiators of shock would also be present in the
circulation during shock. Therefore, shock was induced in rats by
occlusion of the splanchnic artery to cause intestinal ischemia. Blood was
collected from the portal vein and the plasma was isolated for subsequent
experimentation.
Neutrophils were isolated from venous blood collected from healthy human
volunteers in heparinized vacutainer tubes and stored at 4oC.
Human neutrophils (PMNs) were used in these studies after it was shown in
pilot studies that the rat organ extracts stimulated activation of both
human and rat neutrophils to a similar degree. Human neutrophils can be
gathered in larger numbers and are more readily isolated than rat
neutrophils, which significantly overlap with a subpopulation of rat
erythrocytes during isolation.
Neutrophil isolation was carried out using gravity sedimentation to remove
erythrocytes and centrifugation through a Percoll gradient. Isolated
neutrophils were resuspended in PBS to achieve a count of 106
neutrophils/ml. 100 .mu.l aliquots of suspended neutrophils were added to
100 .mu.l of activating agent (e.g. tissue homogenate) or PBS as a
control, and incubated for 10 minutes at 27oC. After incubation,
100 .mu.l of 3% glutaraldehyde (Fisher Scientific, Fair Lawn, N.J.) was
added to fix the cells. 100 .mu.l of crystal violet in phosphate (pH: 7.4)
buffer was added to label leukocyte nuclei for identification on wet mount
preparations. Freely suspended neutrophils with pseudopodia were
identified by their segmented nuclei and by the presence of cytoplasmic
granules. One hundred neutrophils were counted per slide. Cells having
pseudopod projections greater than about 1 .mu.m were considered positive.
Repeated measurements by the same investigator indicated that such counts
were reproducible within 2%.
Another aspect of neutrophil activation is superoxide production and free
radical formation. The damaging effects of active oxygen species can be
mitigated by a number of antioxidants. Antioxidants function both by
inhibiting the production of activated oxygen species (e.g. superoxide
dismutase, catalase) and free radical scavengers (e.g. vitamins C and E
and glutathione). NBT reduction to blue-black formazan crystals by
neutrophils is associated with superoxide production. Fresh arterial blood
(0.1 ml) from healthy donor rats was mixed with 25 .mu.l of stock
homogenate solution and immediately transferred into a clean siliconized 1
dram glass vial (Sigma Diagnostics, St. Louis, Mo.), then mixed with an
equal volume of 0.1% NBT-solution. The glass vials were incubated at
37oC. in air for 10 minutes and subsequently allowed to stand at
room temperature for an additional 10 minutes. At the end of this period,
the blood-NBT mixture was gently stirred. Coverslip smears were made and
stained with Wright's stain. A total of 100 neutrophils were counted at
100.times. oil objective magnification. Neutrophils that showed a stippled
cytoplasm with deposits of formazan or a dense clump of formazan were
counted as NBT-positive cells. Slides were measured in duplicate or
triplicate and the results were averaged. Superoxide production was
stimulated significantly by liver homogenates (21+ 3%) as compared to
buffer controls (7%+2%, p<0.05), but this stimulation was much weaker
than that seen by pancreatic homogenates (42%+14%, p<0.005).
Free radical formation was confirmed by an alternative chemiluminescence
technique. Human venous blood from healthy volunteers was collected in
heparinized vacutainer tubes and centrifuged for 10 minutes at 500 g. The
plasma layer, including the buffy coat, was carefully collected using a
sterile transfer pipette. 3 ml of plasma were mixed with lucigenin (N,N'-dimethyl-9,9'-bisacridinium
dinitrite) (Sigma). 1 ml of a 1 mM stock solution of lucigenin in saline,
final concentration of 200 .mu.M, which is near the optimal concentration,
was used for each measurement performed in small petri dishes (60 mm
diameter). Plasma was diluted with saline to achieve a count of
1.2.times.105 neutrophils/ml. 1 ml of either whole pancreatic
homogenate, or PBS as a control, was added to the plasma. The photons
emitted from the chemiluminescence were counted for 120 minutes with a
photomultiplier (Stanford Research 4000, Sunnyvale, Calif.) in a
light-shielded housing. Again, highly significant levels of superoxide
production were only seen with the pancreatic homogenates.
Pancreatic homogenates were found to contain neutrophil activators,
indicating that potential mediators of shock were generated. Other tissue
homogenates were found to have effects comparable to buffer controls in
most situations. Plasma from the shocked rats induced activation of
neutrophils, whereas normal plasma did not.
To determine if pancreatic homogenates could induce a "systemic response"
in vitro, non-pancreatic tissues were incubated with substimulatory
quantities of pancreatic homogenate (100 .mu.l pancreatic homogenate/3 ml
organ homogenate). This resulted in significantly elevated levels of
neutrophil activation by non-pancreatic homogenates, particularly
intestine. As the pancreas produces a number of digestive enzymes,
including proteases, a cocktail of trypsin and chymotrypsin was added to
non-pancreatic tissue and the neutrophil activation assays were performed.
Protease treated cell homogenates were found to activate neutrophils,
despite the fact that the proteases alone were unable to stimulate
neutrophil activation, suggesting that the proteolytic products were the
mediators of shock. Homogenization of the pancreas in the presence of
protease inhibitors, including phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (PMSF, Sigma
Chemicals, St. Louis, Mo.), 6-amidino-2napthyl p-guanidobenzoate dimethane-sulfate
(ANGD, nafamostat mesilate, Futhan, Torii Pharmaceutical, Chiba, Japan)
and gabaxalate mesilate (FOY, Ono Pharmaceutical, Japan), all serine
protease inhibitors, significantly decreased the ability of the homogenate
to stimulate neutrophil activation. A decrease from 59+10% to 9+12%
was observed for ANGD treated extracts. Addition of protease inhibitors to
the homogenate after preparation did not significantly decrease neutrophil
activation by the extract (52+34%). This clearly demonstrates that it
is the proteolytic products rather than the proteases that mediate shock.
Addtionally it demonstrates that a variety of tissues may be activated to
generate shock mediators upon exposure to proteases.
Pancreatic homogenates were found to be potent activators of shock in
vivo. Rats were cannulated via the femoral arteries and veins under
general anesthesia (pentobarbital, 50 mg/kg i.m.) and saline, without or
with ANGD, was infused to examine the response of the circulation after
administration of pancreatic homogenate. The arterial catheter served to
record mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate. The venous catheter
was connected to an infusion pump (Model 355, Sage Instruments, Orion
Research, Inc., Cambridge, Mass.) to continuously inject either the
protease inhibitor ANGD (3.3 mg/kg body wt per hour) or a comparable
volume of saline. No heparin was injected other than that needed to
maintain open catheters (10 U/ml Plasma-Lyte, Travenol Laboratory Inc.,
Deerfield, Ill.). After a one hour pretreatment, a bolus injection of
filtered (0.78 .mu.m vacuum filter, Millipore) stock pancreatic homogenate
was administered (2 ml). The extent to which pancreatic homogenate induced
hypotension and circulatory shock, both in the presence and absence of
ANGD, was examined.
Injection of pancreatic homogenates into rats resulted in immediate and
irreversible circulatory collapse, typically within 6 minutes. Shock was
inhibited by a one hour pretreatment with the protease inhibitor ANGD
delivered by an infusion pump into a venous catheter. MAP and heart rate
returned to normal levels within 20 minutes in the ANGD pre-treated
animals, and none of these animals died within the 60 minute
post-injection observation period. This indicated that pretreatment of a
subject with on/yprotease inhibitors can prevent shock after injection of
pancreatic homogenates.
Protease inhibitors prevented shock when applied directly into the lumen
of the intestine as well. The small intestine of rats was perfused at a
constant flow rate (4.0 ml/min) with 45 ml of rat intestinal fluid
supplemented with 5 ml of 5% glucose (IF) or 50 ml of saline with 0.1%
glucose (SAL) or with ANDG at a final concentration of 0.2 mg/ml. The
perfusate was recirculated continuously throughout the entire procedure.
After 15 min of intestinal perfusion, the animals were subjected to 100
min. of splanchnic ischemia, which was confirmed by cyanotic organ
discoloration and loss of the pressure pulsation in the mesentery. After
100 min of splanchnic ischemia, the celiac and superior mesenteric
arteries were reperfused.
The process of shock was monitored by a number of methods in various
tissues throughout the body. Intestinal fluid was analyzed for serine
protease activity. One milliliter of circulating fluid in the intestine
was collected from the reservoir before ischemia and 90 min after
ischemia. Perfusion of the lumen of the intestine with saline, either
without or with the protease inhibitor, significantly decreased the serine
protease activity level in the intestine before ischemia
(IF=5.8+1.8.times.103 units/ml vs. SAL=2.0+0.9.times.103
units/ml and ANGD=1.2+0.1.times.103 units/ml). After 90 min of
ischemia, the serine protease activity levels in the IF, SAL, and ANGD
groups were 5.6+2.3.times.103 units/ml, 3.3+2.3.times.103
units/ml, and 1.2+0.2.times.103 units/ml, respectively. Intestinal
perfusion with ANGD kept the serine protease activity lower than in the
other two groups (p<0.05, SAL vs. ANGD; p<0.01 ANGD vs. IF and SAL
groups).
Arterial and portal venous blood (0.3 ml each) were sampled before
ischemia, after 90 min of ischemia, and 30, 60, and 120 min
postreperfusion. The samples were analyzed for leukocyte count and
activation based on crystal violet staining. In the preischemic period,
the leukocyte counts were the same in all three groups. In the IF And SAL
groups, the leukocyte count in arterial blood started to decrease after
ischemia and reached its lowest value 120 min after reperfusion.
Intestinal perfusion of the protease inhibitor completely ameliorated
leukopenia. Similarly, ANGD was able to inhibit the activation of
circulating neutrophils (15.0+1.6%) as compared to both IF
(23.3+1.0%, p<0.05) and SAL (25.0+1.6%, p<0.05) at 120 minutes
post-perfusion.
Myeloperoxidase activity was used as a marker for assessment of leukocyte
infiltration into the small intestine, liver, and lung. Tissue
myeloperoxidase levels were determined by a spectrophotometric method. At
120 minutes of reperfusion, myeloperoxidase levels were increased in
intestine (36.1+3.9 U/g to 309.3+51.0 U/g), liver (0.4+0.1 U/g to
2.6+0.3 U/g), and lung (29.0+4.4 U/g to 199.2+33.9 U/g). This is
an early indicator of leukocyte infiltration and organ failure in shock.
Intestinal perfusion in the lumen of the intestine with ANGD, however,
significantly attenuated myloperoxidase activity in intestine
(62.5+19.8 U/g), liver (1.0+0.1 U/g), and lung (87.0+13.4 U/g).
Thickness of the intestinal mucosa was used as an indicator of damage to
the intestine. A sample of small intestine was longitudinally dissected,
fixed in 10% buffered formalin, and embedded in paraffin. Five-micrometer
sections were made and stained with hematoxylin and eosin and examined at
200.times. magnification. Severity of intestinal injury was estimated by
the length between the tip of the villi and the musculus mucosae, a
measure of mucosal layer thickness. In each specimen, the measurement was
made at 10 randomly selected locations and averaged. Intestinal perfusion
of protease inhibitor served to maintain mucosal thickness and to reduce
intestinal injury (IF 252.0+34.0 .mu.M vs ANGD 378.0+38.0 .mu.M).
The level of edematous lung injury was assayed by a pulmonary wet/dry
ratio. Lung lobes were harvested, wet weight was determined and samples
were dried at 70oC. for 72 hours. The dried tissue was weighed,
and the ratio of wet to dried weight was calculated. Edema was much
greater in the IF (5.65+0.33) and SAL (4.88+0.39) groups as compared
to the ANGD (3.66+0.27) group which was similar to non-shock controls.
These studies clearly indicate the role of pancreatic proteases in shock
and the protective effects of protease inhibitors. Pancreatic enzymes are
released normally into the small intestine for digestion with no adverse
effects. However, during shock, the intestinal permeability barrier is
compromised. This can reveal protease susceptible sites not present under
normal conditions. Similar sites are revealed upon homogenization of the
intestine. Tissues are broken down and proteolytic products that are
strong activators of shock are released. Clearly a variety of proteolytic
products can act as mediators of shock as a variety of tissue homogenates
can be activated with pancreatic extract or proteases to activate
neutrophils. Therefore, shock is most effectively treated by preventing
protease activation or by the inhibition or elimination of the proteases
that generate the activators of shock.
Claim 1 of 15 Claims
We claim:
1. A method for prevention or treatment of physiological shock comprising
administering to an individual containing an intestine a therapeutic dose
of a serine protease inhibitor directly into the small intestine to
inactivate a protease, thereby ameliorating shock.
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