Cargando…

Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function

Arginine vasopressin (AVP), a hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary, plays a vital role in maintaining vasomotor tone during acute blood loss. We hypothesized that decompensated hemorrhagic shock is associated with decreased AVP stores and supplementation during resuscitation would improve bot...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sims, Carrie A., Yuxia, Guan, Singh, Khushboo, Werlin, Evan C., Reilly, Patrick M., Baur, Joseph A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655425/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29065123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186339
_version_ 1783273531959672832
author Sims, Carrie A.
Yuxia, Guan
Singh, Khushboo
Werlin, Evan C.
Reilly, Patrick M.
Baur, Joseph A.
author_facet Sims, Carrie A.
Yuxia, Guan
Singh, Khushboo
Werlin, Evan C.
Reilly, Patrick M.
Baur, Joseph A.
author_sort Sims, Carrie A.
collection PubMed
description Arginine vasopressin (AVP), a hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary, plays a vital role in maintaining vasomotor tone during acute blood loss. We hypothesized that decompensated hemorrhagic shock is associated with decreased AVP stores and supplementation during resuscitation would improve both blood pressure and renal function. Using a decompensated hemorrhagic shock model, male Long-Evans rats were bled to mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) of 40mmHg and maintained until the MAP could not be sustained without fluid. Once 40% of the shed volume was returned in lactated Ringer’s (Severe Shock), animals were resuscitated over 60 minutes with 4x the shed volume in lactated Ringer’s (LR) or the same fluids with AVP (0.5 units/kg+ 0.03 units/kg/min). Animals (n = 6-9/group) were sacrificed before hemorrhage (Sham), at Severe Shock, following resuscitation (60R, 60R with AVP) or 18 hours post-resuscitation (18hr, 18hr with AVP). Blood samples were taken to measure AVP levels and renal function. Pituitaries were harvested and assayed for AVP. Kidney samples were taken to assess mitochondrial function, histology, and oxidative damage. Baseline pituitary AVP stores (30,364 ± 5311 pg/mg) decreased with severe shock and were significantly depressed post-resuscitation (13,910 ± 3016 pg/ml. p<0.05) and at 18hr (15,592 ±1169 pg/ml, p<0.05). Resuscitation with LR+AVP led to higher serum AVP levels at 60R (31±8 vs 79±12; p<0.01) with an improved MAP both at 60R (125±3 vs 77±7mmHg; p<0.01) and 18hr (82±6 vs 69±5mmHg;p<0.05). AVP supplementation preserved complex I respiratory capacity at 60R and both complex I and II function at 18hr (p<0.05). AVP was also associated with decreased reactive oxygen species at 60R (856±67 vs 622±48F RFU) and significantly decreased oxidative damage as measured by mitochondrial lipid peroxidation (0.9±0.1 vs 1.7±0.1 fold change, p<0.01) and nitrosylation (0.9±0.1 vs 1.4±0.2 fold change, p<0.05). With AVP, renal damage was mitigated at 60R and histologic architecture was conserved at 18 hours. In conclusion, pituitary and serum AVP levels decrease during severe hemorrhage and may contribute to the development of decompensated hemorrhagic shock. Supplementing exogenous AVP during resuscitation improves blood pressure, preserves renal mitochondrial function, and mitigates acute kidney injury.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5655425
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-56554252017-11-09 Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function Sims, Carrie A. Yuxia, Guan Singh, Khushboo Werlin, Evan C. Reilly, Patrick M. Baur, Joseph A. PLoS One Research Article Arginine vasopressin (AVP), a hormone secreted by the posterior pituitary, plays a vital role in maintaining vasomotor tone during acute blood loss. We hypothesized that decompensated hemorrhagic shock is associated with decreased AVP stores and supplementation during resuscitation would improve both blood pressure and renal function. Using a decompensated hemorrhagic shock model, male Long-Evans rats were bled to mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) of 40mmHg and maintained until the MAP could not be sustained without fluid. Once 40% of the shed volume was returned in lactated Ringer’s (Severe Shock), animals were resuscitated over 60 minutes with 4x the shed volume in lactated Ringer’s (LR) or the same fluids with AVP (0.5 units/kg+ 0.03 units/kg/min). Animals (n = 6-9/group) were sacrificed before hemorrhage (Sham), at Severe Shock, following resuscitation (60R, 60R with AVP) or 18 hours post-resuscitation (18hr, 18hr with AVP). Blood samples were taken to measure AVP levels and renal function. Pituitaries were harvested and assayed for AVP. Kidney samples were taken to assess mitochondrial function, histology, and oxidative damage. Baseline pituitary AVP stores (30,364 ± 5311 pg/mg) decreased with severe shock and were significantly depressed post-resuscitation (13,910 ± 3016 pg/ml. p<0.05) and at 18hr (15,592 ±1169 pg/ml, p<0.05). Resuscitation with LR+AVP led to higher serum AVP levels at 60R (31±8 vs 79±12; p<0.01) with an improved MAP both at 60R (125±3 vs 77±7mmHg; p<0.01) and 18hr (82±6 vs 69±5mmHg;p<0.05). AVP supplementation preserved complex I respiratory capacity at 60R and both complex I and II function at 18hr (p<0.05). AVP was also associated with decreased reactive oxygen species at 60R (856±67 vs 622±48F RFU) and significantly decreased oxidative damage as measured by mitochondrial lipid peroxidation (0.9±0.1 vs 1.7±0.1 fold change, p<0.01) and nitrosylation (0.9±0.1 vs 1.4±0.2 fold change, p<0.05). With AVP, renal damage was mitigated at 60R and histologic architecture was conserved at 18 hours. In conclusion, pituitary and serum AVP levels decrease during severe hemorrhage and may contribute to the development of decompensated hemorrhagic shock. Supplementing exogenous AVP during resuscitation improves blood pressure, preserves renal mitochondrial function, and mitigates acute kidney injury. Public Library of Science 2017-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC5655425/ /pubmed/29065123 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186339 Text en © 2017 Sims et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sims, Carrie A.
Yuxia, Guan
Singh, Khushboo
Werlin, Evan C.
Reilly, Patrick M.
Baur, Joseph A.
Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title_full Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title_fullStr Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title_full_unstemmed Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title_short Supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
title_sort supplemental arginine vasopressin during the resuscitation of severe hemorrhagic shock preserves renal mitochondrial function
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655425/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29065123
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186339
work_keys_str_mv AT simscarriea supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction
AT yuxiaguan supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction
AT singhkhushboo supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction
AT werlinevanc supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction
AT reillypatrickm supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction
AT baurjosepha supplementalargininevasopressinduringtheresuscitationofseverehemorrhagicshockpreservesrenalmitochondrialfunction