Background: Diabetes mellitus (DM) induces cardiac and cerebral microvascular dysfunction via increased glycation, oxidative stress and endothelial activation. Liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue, inhibited NOX2 and adhesion molecules in isolated endothelial cells. Here, we have studied how Liraglutide affects advanced glycation, NOX expression and inflammation of the cardiac, cerebral and renal microvasculature in diabetic rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntiinflamm Antiallergy Agents Med Chem
November 2021
Background: Burns induce a boost in local and systemic complement levels as well as immune cell infiltration in the burn wound, which may negatively affect wound healing.
Objective: In this study, the effects of long-term treatment with complement inhibitor C1 esterase inhibitor (C1inh) on post-burn inflammation and wound healing parameters were analyzed in time up to 60 days post-burn.
Methods: Burned pigs were treated either with or without C1inh up to 15 days post-burn.
IgG4 antibodies are unique to humans. IgG4 is associated with tolerance during immunotherapy in allergy, but also with pathology, as in pemphigus vulgaris and IgG4-related disease. Its induction is largely restricted to nonmicrobial antigens, and requires repeated or prolonged antigenic stimulation, for reasons poorly understood.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn patients with burns, a massive inflammatory response is induced which negatively affects the healing process of the burn wound and additionally exerts systemic effects. An important factor herein is the complement system. Here we analyzed the effects of burns on complement and inflammatory cells both locally and systemically after burn in time in a pig burn wound model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Arterial blood pressure-induced shear stress causes endothelial cell apoptosis and inflammation in vein grafts after coronary artery bypass grafting. As the inflammatory protein type IIA secretory phospholipase A (sPLA-IIA) has been shown to progress atherosclerosis, we hypothesized a role for sPLA-IIA herein.
Methods: The effects of PX-18, an inhibitor of both sPLA-IIA and apoptosis, on residual endothelium and the presence of sPLA-IIA were studied in human saphenous vein segments (n = 6) perfused at arterial blood pressure with autologous blood for 6 hrs.
Objective: Although lymphocytic myocarditis (LM) clinically can mimic myocardial infarction (MI), they are regarded as distinct clinical entities. However, we observed a high prevalence (32%) of recent MI in patients diagnosed post-mortem with LM. To investigate if LM changes coronary atherosclerotic plaque, we analyzed in autopsied hearts the inflammatory infiltrate and stability in coronary atherosclerotic lesions in patients with LM and/or MI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo diagnose lymphocytic myocarditis (LM), immunohistopathological examination of endomyocardial biopsies (EMBs) is used with a cutoff value of at least 14 leukocytes per mm, composed of CD3- and CD68-positive cells. We hypothesized that a more common leukocyte marker, CD45, instead of CD3 could increase the diagnostic sensitivity. Hearts of mice with acute viral myocarditis (n = 9) and of controls (n = 7) and the EMB sampling area of the left ventricular posterior wall (LVPW) obtained from autopsied hearts of patients diagnosed with LM (n = 18) and controls (n = 6) were stained with anti-CD68, anti-CD3, and anti-CD45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Adipose-derived stromal cells (ASCs) are a promising new therapeutic option for patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Previously, we found that ASCs coupled to antibody-targeted microbubbles (StemBells [StBs]) improved cardiac function when administered intravenously 7 days post-AMI in rats. In this study, we compared the efficacy of intravenous StB administration at different administration time points following AMI in rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe complement system plays an important role in the inflammatory response subsequent to acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The aim of this study is to create a systematic overview of studies that have investigated therapeutic administration of complement inhibitors in both AMI animal models and human clinical trials. To enable extrapolation of observations from included animal studies toward post-AMI clinical trials, ex vivo studies on isolated hearts and proof-of-principle studies on inhibitor administration before experimental AMI induction were excluded.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: Inflammation plays an important role in the pathogenesis of myocardial infarction (MI). Whether MI induces atrial inflammation is unknown however. Here, we analysed atrial inflammation in patients with MI and in rats with experimentally induced MI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: There is a clinical need for immunosuppressive therapy that can treat myocarditis patients in the presence of an active viral infection. In this study we therefore investigated the effects of colchicine, an immunosuppressive drug which has been used successfully as treatment for pericarditis patients, in a mouse model of coxsackievirus B3(CVB3)-induced myocarditis.
Methods: Four groups of C3H mice were included: control mice (n=8), mice infected with CVB3 (1×10(5) PFU, n=10), mice with colchicine administration (2mg/kg i.
Cardiovasc Pathol
December 2016
Background: Complement activation contributes significantly to inflammation-related damage in the heart after acute myocardial infarction. Knowledge on factors that regulate postinfraction complement activation is incomplete however. In this study, we investigated whether endogenous C1-inhibitor, a well-known inhibitor of complement activation, is expressed in the heart after acute myocardial infarction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Diagnosing lymphocytic myocarditis (LM) is challenging because of the large variation in clinical presentation and the limitations inherent in current diagnostic tools. The objective of this study was to analyze infiltration of inflammatory cells in quadriceps skeletal muscle of LM patients and investigate the potential diagnostic value of assaying infiltrating inflammatory cells.
Methods: Quadriceps muscle tissue, obtained at autopsy from control patients (n = 9) and LM patients (n = 21), was analyzed using immunohistochemistry for infiltration of lymphocytes (CD45), macrophages (CD68), neutrophilic granulocytes (myeloperoxidase), and several lymphocyte subtypes (CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20) and using polymerase chain reaction for a panel of myocarditis-associated viruses.
Context: C1-esterase inhibitor (C1-inh) therapy is currently administered to patients with C1-inh deficiency through intravenous injections. The possibility of subcutaneous administration is currently being explored since this would alleviate need for hospitalization and increase mobility and well-being of patients. Recently, it was observed in pigs that C1-inh indeed can effectively be applied by subcutaneous injection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF