Publications by authors named "Manhart N"

Background: An overwhelming production of reactive oxygen species concomitant with a decrease in antioxidative capacity plays an important role in modulation of the immune system in critically ill patients. The purpose of this study was to assess the influence of a combined oral supply of the antioxidants R-alpha-lipoic acid (LA) and glutamine (GLN) on the immunity of endotoxemic mice, with a special focus on tissue glutathione levels.

Methods: Female Balb/c mice were fed diets enriched with GLN (3 g/100 kcal), LA (0.

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Oxidative stress plays an important role during inflammatory diseases and recent therapies have focused on antioxidant administration to diminish oxidative stress and to arrest inflammatory processes. In this study, we investigated the impact of the GSH modulating effects of curcumin, a naturally derived polyphenol, on inflammatory processes in myelomonocytic U937 cells. One hour after administration of 10 micromol/l curcumin reactive oxygen species (ROS) production was significantly increased in undifferentiated U937 cells (+43%).

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Purpose Of Review: Oxidative stress is caused by a higher production of reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species or a decrease in endogenous protective antioxidative capacity. In all types of critical illness, such as sepsis, trauma, burn injury, acute pancreatitis, liver injury, severe diabetes, acute respiratory distress syndrome, AIDS and kidney failure, the occurrence of increased oxidative stress or a reduced antioxidative status is described. Whereas in the past, reactive oxygen and reactive nitrogen species were mainly known as harmful agents, recent investigations have given a new insight into the (patho)physiological importance of these substances as powerful messenger molecules involved in gene regulation, thereby enabling the synthesis of cytokines or adhesion molecules necessary for defending inflammatory processes.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine whether fructooligosaccharides (FOS) exert an immunomodulating effect on Peyer's patches (PP), the main inductive site of the intestinal immune system. We investigated the effects of FOS in healthy and endotoxemic animals.

Methods: Six-week-old female Balb/c mice were fed a control diet or a diet supplemented with 10% FOS over a period of 16 d.

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Background: I.V. infusions of vitamin E emulsion (all-rac-alpha-tocopherol) may reduce ischaemia-reperfusion injury after elective cardiac surgery.

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Recent publications revealed that bromelain exerts a marked effect on T-cell response by inhibiting T-cell signal transduction. These experimental studies may help to explain former clinical investigations showing that Phlogenzym (PHL), a preparation consisting of the proteases bromelain and trypsin and the antioxidant rutosid, ameliorate certain diseases with an underlying inflammatory process. In this study, we showed that orally administered PHL significantly reduced lymphocyte subpopulations in Peyer's patches (PPs) of healthy and endotoxemic mice.

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Glutamine (GLN) is the most abundant free amino acid (AA) in the human body. Under GLN-free conditions, which can be obtained when cells are cultivated in vitro, tissue cells cannot grow. Therefore, when classifying GLN as a "non-essential" AA, one must consider that in the human body GLN is synthesized from essential AAs and is continuously delivered from skeletal muscle to other organs.

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Objective: To determine the effect of oral glutamine feeding on lymphocyte subpopulations and glutathione metabolism in Peyer's patches (PPs) of healthy and endotoxemic mice.

Summary Background Data: Recent data indicate that nutrients both maintain nitrogen and energy balances and modulate cell and organ function. In particular, glutamine has an impact on gut and immune function.

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Background And Aims: Surgery, trauma and inflammation reduce HLA-DR expression on monocytes, which is associated with an increased susceptibility to infection and sepsis. Furthermore, surgery decreases plasma glutamine (GLN) levels. The expression of HLA-DR on human monocytes in vitro is dependent on the concentration of GLN in the culture medium.

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Intestinal mucosal dysfunction appears to contribute to infectious complications in critically ill patients. The current study was undertaken to investigate whether endotoxin affects lymphocyte subpopulations and the expression of costimulatory signals in Peyer's patches (PP). Female Balb/c mice were given an intraperitoneal injection of 25 microg LPS and sacrified 24 h or 72 h later to determine total cell yield, lymphocyte subpopulations (B-cells, total T-cells, CD4+- and CD8+-cells), the costimulatory molecules CD28, B7.

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Reactive oxygen species, formed in various biochemical reactions, are normally scavenged by antioxidants. Glutathione in its reduced form (GSH) is the most powerful intracellular antioxidant, and the ratio of reduced to oxidised glutathione (GSH:GSSG) serves as a representative marker of the antioxidative capacity of the cell. Several clinical conditions are associated with reduced GSH levels which as a consequence can result in a lowered cellular redox potential.

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Background And Aims: This study was undertaken to compare the effect of different key nutrients on lymphocyte subsets of Peyer's patches (PP) and spleen in endotoxemic mice.

Methods: Female Balb/c mice were fed over a period of 10 days either with an isocaloric and isonitrogenous control diet (Control), a glutamine enriched diet (Diet I) or a diet containing glutamine, arginine, glycine, and n-3 fatty acids (Diet II). On day 7 the mice were challenged intraperitoneally with 25 microg LPS.

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The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of short-term protein malnutrition (PM) on immunoglobulin A (IgA) production and on the number and phenotype of lymphocytes in Peyer's patches (PP) and in the spleen. Balb/c mice were fed for 4, 7, or 10 d with a protein-deficient diet (0.1% protein).

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Polytrauma (PT) leads to systemic activation of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs). Organ damage commonly found in these patients is ascribed to respiratory bursts of activated PMNs. With the use of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, PMN extracts from PT patients were found to contain a clear protein band not seen in control PMNs from healthy volunteers.

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Cytokines play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of septic shock. Proinflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) and interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) stimulate the progression of septic shock whereas the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 has counterregulative potency. The amino acid glycine (GLY) has been shown to protect against endotoxin shock in the rat by inhibiting TNF-alpha production.

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Generation of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) has been implicated in tissue damage in a variety of disease states including sepsis and trauma. On the other hand, generation of ROI in polymorphonuclear granulocytes (PMN) presents a crucial element in the defence of the host against invading microorganisms. In the present study we investigated the generation of superoxide anions (O2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) by neutrophils (PMN)5 of 17 critically ill patients treated at a intensive care unit (ICU) after polytrauma (n = 6), heart operation (n = 6) or during septic shock (n = 5) using flow cytometry.

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