American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
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Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med. · Mar 1999
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialRegulation of adhesion molecules during human endotoxemia. No acute effects of aspirin.
Gram-negative septic shock is mediated in part by endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide; LPS), and animal models have shown that blockade of even single adhesion molecules considerably improves survival. Thus interference with the adhesion cascade may provide a useful therapeutic approach in human sepsis. Young healthy men (n = 30) each received a bolus of 4 ng/kg LPS intravenously to study the effects of endotoxemia on adhesion processes in humans and to identify potential targets for pharmacologic intervention. ⋯ Aspirin had no influence on the LPS-induced changes of adhesion parameters, but paracetamol blunted the relative increase in vWF while having no effects on the other parameters measured. The consistent, profound, and early upregulation of cE-selectin during endotoxemia indicates that cE-selectin may be a better surrogate marker to monitor the activation status of endothelial cells in systemic inflammation than the other markers measured. Although aspirin did not have any antiinflammatory effects in this model, paracetamol lowered the relative increase in vWF.