Abstract

BackgroundDespite many animal studies and clinical trials, mortality in sepsis remains high. This may be due to the fact that most experimental studies of sepsis employ young animals, whereas the majority of septic patients are elderly (60 − 70 years). The objective of the present study was to examine the sepsis-induced inflammatory and pro-coagulant responses in aged mice. Since running exercise protects against a variety of diseases, we also examined the effect of voluntary running on septic responses in aged mice.MethodsMale C57BL/6 mice were housed in our institute from 2–3 to 22 months (an age mimicking that of the elderly). Mice were prevented from becoming obese by food restriction (given 70–90% of ad libitum consumption amount). Between 20 and 22 months, a subgroup of mice ran voluntarily on wheels, alternating 1–3 days of running with 1–2 days of rest. At 22 months, mice were intraperitoneally injected with sterile saline (control) or 3.75 g/kg fecal slurry (septic). At 7 h post injection, we examined (1) neutrophil influx in the lung and liver by measuring myeloperoxidase and/or neutrophil elastase in the tissue homogenates by spectrophotometry, (2) interleukin 6 (IL6) and KC in the lung lavage by ELISA, (3) pulmonary surfactant function by measuring percentage of large aggregates, (4) capillary plugging (pro-coagulant response) in skeletal muscle by intravital microscopy, (5) endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) protein in skeletal muscle (eNOS-derived NO is putative inhibitor of capillary plugging) by immunoblotting, and (6) systemic blood platelet counts by hemocytometry.ResultsSepsis caused high levels of pulmonary myeloperoxidase, elastase, IL6, KC, liver myeloperoxidase, and capillary plugging. Sepsis also caused low levels of surfactant function and platelet counts. Running exercise increased eNOS protein and attenuated the septic responses.ConclusionsVoluntary running protects against exacerbated sepsis-induced inflammatory and pro-coagulant responses in aged mice. Protection against pro-coagulant responses may involve eNOS upregulation. The present discovery in aged mice calls for clinical investigation into potential beneficial effects of exercise on septic outcomes in the elderly.

Highlights

  • Despite many animal studies and clinical trials, mortality in sepsis remains high

  • Sepsis increased lactate and peritoneal fluid bacterial count in comparison to control mice; there was no difference in lactate and bacterial count between non-running and running mice among either the control or septic aged mice (Table 1)

  • Septic pulmonary and non-pulmonary responses In non-running mice, sepsis elevated pulmonary MPO compared to control

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Summary

Introduction

Despite many animal studies and clinical trials, mortality in sepsis remains high. This may be due to the fact that most experimental studies of sepsis employ young animals, whereas the majority of septic patients are elderly (60 − 70 years). The objective of the present study was to examine the sepsis-induced inflammatory and pro-coagulant responses in aged mice. Sepsis is a systemic inflammatory response to local infection, leading to multiple organ failure and 40% mortality in Intensive Care Units [1]. Despite many animal studies and more than 70 clinical trials, there is no definitive treatment for sepsis [3] and, as such, the already high socioeconomic burden of sepsis is expected to increase further with our aging population. Inflammation in other organs systems, such as liver, heart, kidneys, and various systemic processes, such as the function of the microvascular system and the coagulation pathways, are involved in the initiation and progression of the septic response [5]

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