Abstract

Sepsis is frequently associated with or com- plicates short-bowel syndrome (SBS). To investigate the effects of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) endotoxemia on en- terocyte proliferation and death via apoptosis in a rat model of SBS, adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were divided into three experimental groups: sham rats un- derwent bowel transection and reanastomosis; SBS rats underwent 75% small-bowel resection; and SBS-LPS rats underwent 75% bowel resection and were given intraperitoneal injections of LPS 10 mg/kg. Parameters of intestinal adaptation (bowel and mucosal weights, mucosal DNA and protein, villus height, and crypt depth), enterocyte proliferation, and death via apoptosis were determined on day 15 after the operation. Statis- tical analysis was determined by Student's and ANOVA tests with a P less than 0.05 considered significant. SBS- LPS animals demonstrated a significant decrease (vs SBS rats) in duodenal (20%), jejunal (30%), and ileal (15%) overall weight, duodenal (20%), jejunal (27%), and ileal (18%) mucosal weight, jejunal (20%) and ileal (30%) mucosal DNA, jejunal (29%) and ileal (31%) villus height, and jejunal (14%) and ileal (29%) crypt depth. LPS endotoxemia led to reduced cell proliferation and enterocyte apoptosis compared to untreated SBS ani- mals. Thus, in a rat model of SBS, LPS endotoxemia inhibits intestinal adaptation. A possible mechanism may be decreased cell proliferation. Decreased entero- cyte loss via apoptosis may reflect a reduced number of enterocytes. Other mechanisms (necrosis) may be mainly responsible for cell death following LPS injection.

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