Clinical science
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Capillary leak accompanying systemic inflammatory response conditions is a significant clinical problem. In the present study, we describe and verify a method for studying capillary leak that is based on the injection of proteins that differ significantly in size and have spectrally distinguishable fluorophores. Control (n=11) and post-CLP (caecal ligation and puncture; n=14) Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with tracer amounts of albumin and PEG-Alb [albumin covalently linked to methoxy-poly(ethylene glycol)] labelled with fluorescein and Texas Red. ⋯ The t(50%[PEG-Alb]) was substantially greater than the corresponding t(50%[albumin]) for both control (29.8+/-9.8 compared with 7.2+/-2.0 h respectively; P<0.001) and CLP (12.9+/-5.6 compared with 5.1+/-1.6 h respectively; P<0.001) rats. The result was similar irrespective of the fluorophore-protein combination, validating the multifluorophore technique. In conclusion, the double-fluorophore approach described in the present study may provide the future basis for a method to quantify capillary leak in disease.