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Ischemia-Reperfusion injury Su Chang Fu 90/6/19. Ischemia Anesthesiologist: MI, peripheral vascular insufficiency, stroke, and hypovolemic shock Restoration.

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Presentation on theme: "Ischemia-Reperfusion injury Su Chang Fu 90/6/19. Ischemia Anesthesiologist: MI, peripheral vascular insufficiency, stroke, and hypovolemic shock Restoration."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ischemia-Reperfusion injury Su Chang Fu 90/6/19

2 Ischemia Anesthesiologist: MI, peripheral vascular insufficiency, stroke, and hypovolemic shock Restoration of blood flow to an ischemic organ is essential to prevent irreversible cellular injury Reperfusion may augment tissue injury

3 Ischemia-Reperfusion Thrombolytic therapy, organ transplantation, coronary angioplasty, aortic cross-clamping, or cardiopulmonary bypass Severe: systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SISS) or multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS) Account for 30–40% of the mortality in tertiary referral ICU

4 Cellular change during Ischemia Altered membrane potential Altered ion distribution (++ intracellular Ca/Na) Cellular swelling Cytoskeletal disorgnization Increased hypoxanthine Decreased ATP Decreased phosphocreatinine Cellular acidosis

5 Cellular Effects of Ischemia Decreased ATP Intracellular accumulation of hypoxanthine Toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS) during reperfusion

6 Ischemia at Endothelium Express certain proinflammatory gene products(leukocyte adhesion molecules, cytokines) bioactive agents (endothelin, thromboxane A 2 ) Repressing other “protective” gene products (constitutive nitric oxide synthase, thrombomodulin) and bioactive agents ( prostacyclin, nitric oxide).

7 Role of Reactive Oxygen Species Including (O 2 – ), (OH – ), (HOCl), (H 2 O 2 ), and nitric oxide–derived peroxynitrite Directly damage cellular membranes by lipid peroxidation. Stimulate leukocyte activation and chemotaxis by activating plasma membrane phospholipase A 2 to form arachidonic acid (thromboxane A 2 and leukotriene B 4 ) Increase leukocyte activation, chemotaxis, and leukocyte–endothelial adherence after I-R

8 Role of Complement I/R results in complement activation and the formation of several proinflammatory mediators that alter vascular homeostasis C3a, C5a, iC3b, C5b9 Most potent is C5a complement may compromise blood flow to an ischemic organ by altering vascular homeostasis and increasing leukocyte–endothelial adherence.

9 Role of Leukocytes I/R results in leukocyte activation, chemotaxis, leukocyte–endothelial cell adhesion, and transmigration –mechanical obstruction –activated leukocytes release toxic ROS, proteases, and elastases, resulting in increased microvascular permeability, edema, thrombosis, and parenchymal cell death

10 Manifestations of I/R injury Vascular Injury and the “No Reflow” Phenomenon Myocardial Stunning Reperfusion Arrhythmias (VT,VF,idioV) CNS /GI I/R injury Multiorgan Dysfunction Syndrome ☆ risk factors: hypercholesterolemia, hypertension, or diabetes and so on

11 Therapeutic Strategies To Prevent I-R Injury Ischemic Preconditioning Antioxidant Therapy Anticomplement Therapy Antileukocyte Therapy

12 Ischemic Preconditioning Exposure of tissues to brief periods of ischemia protects them from the harmful effects of prolonged I-R –coronary artery bypass grafting –reduce liver injury undergoing hepatic resection Increases cellular adenosine production and confer protection by augmenting cellular energy stores and/or inhibiting leukocyte adherence

13 Antioxidant Therapy superoxide dismutase, catalase, mannitol, allopurinol, vitamin E, N-acetylcysteine, iron chelating compounds, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, or calcium channel antagonists –human recombinant superoxide dismutase in patients with hemorrhagic shock –SOD in cadaveric renal transplantation –equivocal

14 Anticomplement Therapy C3 convertase inhibitor Soluble complement receptor 1 decrease infarct size by 44% in a rat model of myocardial I-R. “Humanized,” recombinant, single-chain antibody specific for human C5 (h5G1.1- scFv) significantly attenuate complement activation, leukocyte activation, myocardial injury, blood loss, and cognitive dysfunction in humans undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass

15 Antileukocyte Therapy inhibition of inflammatory mediator release or receptor engagement, leukocyte adhesion molecule synthesis, or leukocyte–endothelial adhesion –Leukocyte depletion/ Filtration –Soluble interleukin-1 receptor antagonists, anti–tumor necrosis factor antibodies, or platelet activation factor–leukotriene B4 antagonists –Aspirin-triggered lipoxins prevent chemotaxis, adhesion, and transmigration of neutrophils

16 Therapeutic strategies to attenuate I/R injury Controlled, graded reperfusion Ischemic preconditioning Aspirin-triggered lipoxin analogs Antioxidant: SOD, iron chelating compounds, mannitol, allopurinol, vitamin E, N-acetylcysteine Anticomplement Therapy: anti-C5( h5G1.1-scFv) Calcium antagonist Leukocyte depletion/ Filtration

17 Conclusion Treatment of I-R injury is also confounded by the fact that inhibition of I-R–associated inflammation might disrupt protective physiologic responses or result in immunosuppression. timely reperfusion of the ischemic area at risk remains the cornerstone of clinical practice, therapeutic strategies such as ischemic preconditioning, controlled reperfusion, and antioxidant, complement, or neutrophil therapy may significantly prevent or limit I-R injury in humans.

18 Thanks for your attention!


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