Growth Hormone Attenuates the Acute-Phase Response to Thermal Injury
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 132 (11) , 1171-1176
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1997.01430350021003
Abstract
Objective: To determine the effects of growth hormone (GH) on the hepatic acute-phase response (APR) in a burned rat model. Setting: Laboratory. Material: Male Sprague-Dawley rats (weight, 300-350 g). Interventions: Rats underwent a 40% total body surface area burn injury and received GH or saline solution daily by subcutaneous injection. Unburned rats served as controls. Main Outcome Measures: Hepatic messenger RNA (mRNA) expression and serum levels of α1-acid glycoprotein and albumin were determined 2, 7, and 14 days after injury. Results: The serum α1-acid glycoprotein levels in GH-treated animals did not increase on days 2 and 7, whereas saline-treated animals showed a major increase. Hepatic mRNA expression increased dramatically on day 2 for burned groups; however, the mRNA pool levels of GH-treated animals showed a faster rate of decline to control levels on days 7 and 14. The albumin mRNA pool levels of GH-treated and control animals did not show significant differences, whereas the negative APR, indicated by loss of albumin mRNA, was more pronounced on day 7 in the saline-treated animals. By day 14, mRNA levels were comparable in all 3 groups. Conclusion: Growth hormone attenuated the positive APR, as indicated by a decrease in α1-acid glycoprotein expression and production, and prevented the negative APR, as seen by an absence of a decline of albumin mRNA pool levels and serum concentration. We conclude that the beneficial effects of GH on thermal injury may be due in part to a modification of the APR. Arch Surg. 1997;132:1171-1175Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulation of the acute phase response genes alpha1-acid glycoprotein and alpha1-antitrypsin correlates with sensitivity to thermal injurySurgery, 1996
- THE mRNA EXPRESSION AND IN VITRO PRODUCTION OF CYTOKINES AND OTHER PROTEINS BY HEPATOCYTES AND KUPFFER CELLS FOLLOWING THERMAL INJURYShock, 1995
- The macrophage-activating properties of growth hormoneCellular and Molecular Neurobiology, 1992
- The Effects of Burn Injury on the Acute Phase ResponsePublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1992
- Development and analysis of a small animal model simulating the human postburn hypermetabolic responseJournal of Surgical Research, 1978