Abstract

Inhibition of endogenous nitric oxide (NO) synthesis during early intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/Ri) enhances remote organ damage related to I/Ri. However, the effects of NO synthase (NOS) inhibitors on NO formation in various organs have not yet been specified. We therefore investigated the effects of N-G-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), a nonspecific NOS inhibitor, and L-arginine, the NOS substrate, on NO formed in ischemic intestine versus normoxic remote organs (lung and liver). We used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy and a specific NO trap to assay NO in blood, intestine, lung, and liver of rats subjected to local I/Ri, with and without L-NMMA and L-arginine supplementation. We found that I/Ri increased NO levels in the intestine and blood, but not in the remote organs lung and liver. Administration of L-NMMA before I/Ri decreased I/Ri-independent basal NO levels in normoxic lung and liver without influencing I/Ri-induced increase in NO levels in intestinal tissue or in blood. L-arginine supplementation increased circulating levels of NO, with sensitivity to L-NMMA, without affecting NO levels in normoxic or ischemic tissue. Our data suggest that NOS activity controls the NO generated in normally perfused remote organs during early I/Ri. Hence NOS inhibitors, when administered during I/Ri, decrease physiological NO levels in normoxic remote organs without affecting increased NO levels originating from ischemic intestine. This may explain the harmful effect of nonspecific NOS inhibitors during early I/Ri. In addition, the generation of NO in remote organs is not limited by tissue L-arginine concentrations and, therefore, not influenced by exogenous L-arginine. The protective effect of L-arginine supplementation during I/Ri is probably related to increasing intravascular NO formation. (J Lab Clin Med 2002;140:303-11)

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