Shock : molecular, cellular, and systemic pathobiological aspects and therapeutic approaches : the official journal the Shock Society, the European Shock Society, the Brazilian Shock Society, the International Federation of Shock Societies
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Severely burned patients suffer from a hypermetabolic syndrome that can last for years after the injury has resolved. The underlying cause of these metabolic alterations most likely involves the persistent elevated catecholamine levels that follow the surge induced by thermal injury. At the cellular level, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in metabolic tissues is a hallmark observed in patients following burn injury and is associated with several detrimental effects. ⋯ Furthermore, we demonstrate that the alpha-1 blocker, prazosin, and beta blocker, propranolol, block ER stress induced by NE. We also show that the effects of catecholamines in inducing ER stress are cell type-specific, as NE treatment failed to evoke ER stress in human fibroblasts. Thus, these findings reveal the mechanisms used by catecholamines to alter metabolism and suggest inhibition of the receptors utilized by these agents should be further explored as a potential target for the treatment of ER stress-mediated disease.
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Rats subjected to polytrauma and hemorrhage develop a coagulopathy that is similar to acute coagulopathy of trauma in humans, and is associated with a rise in prothrombin time and a fall in clot strength. Because platelet aggregation accounts for a major proportion of clot strength, we set out to characterize the effects of polytrauma on platelet function. ⋯ Polytrauma and hemorrhage led to a deficit in the platelet aggregation response to ADP and AA after trauma, likely due to the early rise in cAMP, and a later fall in energy substrates, and may explain the decrease in clot strength and impaired hemostasis observed after severe trauma.