Abstract
Melatonin has been used to treat experimental pancreatitis, although not all the drug's therapeutic mechanisms of melatonin have been defined. Prostaglandins (PGs) are proinflammatory mediators that exert their effects mainly locally during inflammatory diseases. The present study was undertaken to examine whether treatment with melatonin influences local PG production. An acute pancreatitis model in male Sprague-Dawley rats (225-275 g) was established by continuously infusing caerulein (15 mg/kg/hr). Mean arterial pressure and pancreatic perfusion were monitored continuously. Melatonin was delivered via the intraperitoneal route at doses of either 2 or 10 mg/kg, 30 min after caerulein injection. Malondialdehyde and glutathione levels of the pancreas and liver and the trypsinogen activation peptide levels in the serum were measured at the end of the experiment (8 hr after infusion of caerulein). Intraperitoneal injection of melatonin (2 and 10 mg/kg) reduced the reduction in systemic arterial pressure and decreased pancreatic perfusion in the rat model of caerulein pancreatitis. Moreover, melatonin treatment changed local PG production toward control level. Higher dose of melatonin was somewhat more effective in preventing the caerulein-induced alterations than was the lower dose.
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