Publications by authors named "Billy Abungu"

Gut injury and loss of normal intestinal barrier function are key elements in the paradigm of gut-origin systemic inflammatory response syndrome, acute lung injury, and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS). As hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1) is a critical determinant of the physiological and pathophysiological response to hypoxia and ischemia, we asked whether HIF-1 plays a proximal role in the induction of gut injury and subsequent lung injury. Using partially HIF-1α-deficient mice in an isolated superior mesenteric artery occlusion (SMAO) intestinal ischemia reperfusion (I/R) injury model (45 min SMAO followed by 3 h of reperfusion), we showed a direct relationship between HIF-1 activation and intestinal I/R injury.

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Acute lung injury (ALI) and the development of the multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) are major causes of death in trauma patients. Gut inflammation and loss of gut barrier function as a consequence of splanchnic ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) have been implicated as the initial triggering events that contribute to the development of the systemic inflammatory response, ALI, and MODS. Since hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1) is a key regulator of the physiological and pathophysiological response to hypoxia, we asked whether HIF-1 plays a proximal role in the induction of gut injury and subsequent lung injury.

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Intestinal ischemia after trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) results in gut barrier dysfunction and the production/release of biologically active and tissue injurious factors in the mesenteric lymph, which, in turn, causes acute lung injury and a systemic inflammatory state. Since T/HS-induced lung injury is associated with pulmonary endothelial and epithelial cell programmed cell death (PCD) and was abrogated by mesenteric lymph duct ligation, we sought to investigate the cellular pathways involved. Compared with trauma-sham shock (T/SS) rats, a significant increase in caspase-3 and M30 expression was detected in the pulmonary epithelial cells undergoing PCD, whereas apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF), but not caspase-3, was detected in endothelial cells undergoing PCD.

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Objective: To test the hypothesis that gut-derived factors carried in trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) lymph is sufficient to induce lung injury. Additionally, because our previous studies showed that T/HS-induced nitric oxide production was associated with lung injury, we examined whether T/HS lymph-induced lung injury occurs via an inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)-dependent pathway.

Background: We have previously shown that T/HS-induced lung injury is mediated by gut-derived humoral factors carried in the mesenteric lymph.

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The etiology of trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS)-induced acute lung injury has been difficult to elucidate because of, at least in part, the inability of in vivo studies to separate the noninjurious pulmonary effects of trauma-hemorrhage from the tissue-injurious ones. To circumvent this in vivo limitation, we used a model of T/HS in which T/HS lung injury was abrogated by dividing the mesenteric lymph duct. In this way, it was possible to separate the pulmonary injurious response from the noninjurious systemic response to T/HS by comparing the pulmonary molecular responses of rats subjected to T/HS, which did and did not develop lung injury, with those of nonshocked rats.

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In both animal models of hemorrhagic shock and clinical settings, shock-induced gut ischemia has been implicated in the development of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and distant organ injury, yet the factors transducing these events remain to be fully determined. Because hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1), a transcription factor composed of oxygen-labile HIF-1alpha and constitutive HIF-1beta subunits, regulates the physiologic/pathophysiologic response to hypoxia and ischemia, we examined the HIF-1 response in two rat models of gut ischemia-reperfusion. We found that ileal nuclear HIF-1alpha protein levels were induced in rats subjected to trauma (laparotomy) plus hemorrhagic shock for 90 min relative to their trauma sham-shock and naïve counterparts and that this trauma hemorrhagic shock-induced mucosal HIF-1alpha protein response persisted after 1 h and 3 h of reperfusion.

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Objective: To determine the mechanism by which gut-derived factors present in mesenteric lymph from rats subjected to trauma-hemorrhagic shock (T/HS) induce endothelial cell death.

Summary Background Data: Intestinal ischemia after hemorrhagic shock results in gut barrier dysfunction and the subsequent production of biologically active and tissue injurious factors by the ischemic gut. These factors are carried in the mesenteric lymph and reach the systemic circulation via the mesenteric lymph, thereby ultimately resulting in distant organ injury.

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