Protection of myocardial function during endotoxin shock by ibuprofen
- PMID: 6585848
- DOI: 10.1016/0262-1746(84)90043-x
Protection of myocardial function during endotoxin shock by ibuprofen
Abstract
We have concluded that Ibuprofen, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor with high specificity for the preferential blockage of thromboxane synthetase, significantly improves arterial blood pressure, cardiac index, and arterial pH during endotoxin shock in dogs (J. Clin. Invest. 70:536, 1982). This study was undertaken to determine whether Ibuprofen (25 mg/kg i.v.) administered 20 min prior to endotoxin (2 mg/kg i.v.) is able to overcome the depressed ability of cardiac microsomes to actively sequester calcium after 2 hrs of endotoxin shock. Results indicate that microsomes isolated from hearts of animals pretreated with Ibuprofen and then given endotoxin are able to sequester calcium at rates similar to microsomes isolated from control hearts. Microsomes isolated from hearts of animals in endotoxin shock without Ibuprofen show the anticipated depression of calcium sequestering ability. The improved ability of microsomes from the hearts of animals pretreated with Ibuprofen to sequester calcium is the result of normal Ca+2-Mg+2 ATPase activity in the microsomal membrane. We conclude that Ibuprofen protects against the detrimental hemodynamic derangements of endotoxin induced shock in the dog, and thereby also improves cardiac subcellular calcium transport; the factor regulating contractility. Ibuprofen may warrant evaluation as a protective agent to be used prophylactically in high risk cases of endotoxemia.