AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the effects of remote ischaemic conditioning (RIC) on brain and lung injuries during hyper-inflammatory responses caused by COVID-19 in rats.
  • RIC was found to significantly reduce brain infarct size (23% with pre-treatment and 30% with post-treatment) and decrease lung injury, while also modulating inflammation levels by lowering certain chemokines.
  • The findings suggest that RIC not only protects the brain and lungs but also helps manage overall inflammation response, which may offer new treatment avenues for stroke patients affected by COVID-19.

Article Abstract

The inflammation and coagulopathy during coronavirus disease (COVID-19) impairs the efficiency of the current stroke treatments. Remote ischaemic conditioning (RIC) has shown potential in recent years to protect the brain and other organs against pathological conditions. This study aimed to evaluate the efficiency of RIC in brain infarct size using TTC staining and lung injury reduction by H&E staining during the hyper-inflammatory response in rats. The inflammation and coagulopathy were assessed by sedimentation rate, haematocrit, systemic oxidative stress and clotting time. Moreover, we observed changes in the cytokine profile. The results of the first part of the experiment showed that the inflammation and lung injury are fully developed after 24 h of intratracheal LPS administration. At this time, we induced focal brain ischaemia and examined the effect of RIC pre- and post-treatment. Our results showed that RIPre-C reduced the infarct size by about 23%, while RIPost-C by about 30%. The lung injury was also reduced following both treatments. Moreover, RIC modulated systemic inflammation. The level of chemokines CINC-1, LIX and RANTES decreased after 24 h of post-ischaemic reperfusion in treated animals compared to non-treated. The RIC-mediated decrease of inflammation was reflected in improved sedimentation rate and hematocrit, as well as reduced systemic oxidative stress. The results of this work showed neuroprotective and lung protective effects of RIC with a decrease in inflammation response. On the basis of our results, we assume that immunomodulation through the chemokines CINC-1, LIX, and RANTES play a role in RIC-mediated protection.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11377586PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-71328-zDOI Listing

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