Nitric oxide, leukocytes and microvascular permeability: causality or bystanders?
- PMID: 18226179
- PMCID: PMC2374610
- DOI: 10.1186/cc6214
Nitric oxide, leukocytes and microvascular permeability: causality or bystanders?
Abstract
Increased microvascular permeability resulting in tissue edema is a hallmark of sepsis-related microcirculatory failure, and leukocyte-endothelium interaction is thought to assume major importance in this context. However, the role of nitric oxide (NO) in the interplay of inflammation, leukocyte-endothelium interaction and increased microcirculatory permeability is still a matter of debate. Hollenberg et al. now report, in the previous issue of Critical Care, that neither genetic deletion nor pharmacologic blockade of the inducible isoform of the NO synthase (iNOS) affected the sepsis-related aggravation of leukocyte rolling and adhesion, whereas iNOS inhibition attenuated microvascular permeability. The authors conclude that excess NO resulting from iNOS activation is important in modulating vascular permeability during sepsis, but that this effect is independent of its action on leukocytes.
Comment on
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Discordance between microvascular permeability and leukocyte dynamics in septic inducible nitric oxide synthase deficient mice.Crit Care. 2007;11(6):R125. doi: 10.1186/cc6190. Crit Care. 2007. PMID: 18062823 Free PMC article.
References
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- Hollenberg SM, Broussard M, Osman J, Parrillo JE. Increased microvascular reactivity and improved mortality in septic mice lacking inducible nitric oxide synthase. Circ Res. 2000;86:774–779. - PubMed
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- Gaboury J, Woodman RC, Granger DN, Reinhardt P, Kubes P. Nitric oxide prevents leukocyte adherence: role of superoxide. Am J Physiol. 1993;265:H862–H867. - PubMed
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