Inflammatory mediators of experimental colitis in rats.
1989
Abstract Colonic inflammation was induced in rats by intracolonic administration of 0.25 ml of 50% ethanol containing 30 mg of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNB). Control rats were treated with 0.25 ml of 50% ethanol or with 30 mg of TNB in 0.25 ml of saline. After 24 h, mucosal ulceration and hemorrhage were observed in TNB/ethanol-, 50% ethanol-, and to a lesser extent, in TNB/saline-treated rats. After 1 wk, mucosal damage was completely resolved in the 50% ethanol and TNB/saline-treated rats but the lesions in the TNB/ethanol-treated rats persisted and progressed to a chronic active inflammatory process after 3 wk. Myeloperoxidase activity was significantly elevated in mucosal scrapings from all treatment groups at all time intervals when macroscopic and microscopic mucosal injury was evident. Interleukin-1 was found to be the most sensitive indicator of mucosal inflammation, and its mucosal values correlated with myeloperoxidase activity. Leukotriene B 4 was increased in control rats at 1 wk and in TNB/ethanol-treated rats at all time intervals. The maximal increase in leukotriene B 4 was observed at 1 wk. Thromboxane B 2 generation was reduced while platelet activating factor generation was not increased in TNB/ethanoltreated rats. These results indicate that in this TNB/ethanol model of gut inflammation, myeloperoxidase activity and interleukin-1 are reliable and sensitive indicators of colonic inflammation, and that thromboxane B 2 is not involved in the acute lesions, whereas leukotriene B 4 appears in the chronic active inflammatory response.
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