7th International Symposium on Cell/Tissue Injury and Cytoprotection/Organoprotection - Focus on the Gastrointestinal Tract: Honolulu, Hawaii, USA, September 9-11, 2012

Digestion ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 87 (3) ◽  
pp. 160-162
Author(s):  
Koji Takeuchi ◽  
Sandor Szabo
1995 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. 397-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Kubes ◽  
John L. Wallace

Nitric oxide has been suggested as a contributor to tissue injury in various experimental models of gastrointestinal inflammation. However, there is overwhelming evidence that nitric oxide is one of the most important mediators of mucosal defence, influencing such factors as mucus secretion, mucosal blood flow, ulcer repair and the activity of a variety of mucosal immunocytes. Nitric oxide has the capacity to down-regulate inflammatory responses in the gastrointestinal tract, to scavenge various free radical species and to protect the mucosa from injury induced by topical irritants. Moreover, questions can be raised regarding the evidence purported to support a role for nitric oxide in producing tissue injury. In this review, we provide an overview of the evidence supporting a role for nitric oxide in protecting the gastrointestinal tract from injury.


2012 ◽  
Vol 303 (1) ◽  
pp. G93-G102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krishnan MohanKumar ◽  
Niroop Kaza ◽  
Ramasamy Jagadeeswaran ◽  
Steven A. Garzon ◽  
Anchal Bansal ◽  
...  

Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) is an inflammatory bowel necrosis of premature infants. In tissue samples of NEC, we identified numerous macrophages and a few neutrophils but not many lymphocytes. We hypothesized that these pathoanatomic characteristics of NEC represent a common tissue injury response of the gastrointestinal tract to a variety of insults at a specific stage of gut development. To evaluate developmental changes in mucosal inflammatory response, we used trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced inflammation as a nonspecific insult and compared mucosal injury in newborn vs. adult mice. Enterocolitis was induced in 10-day-old pups and adult mice ( n = 25 animals per group) by administering TNBS by gavage and enema. Leukocyte populations were enumerated in human NEC and in murine TNBS-enterocolitis using quantitative immunofluorescence. Chemokine expression was measured using quantitative polymerase chain reaction, immunoblots, and immunohistochemistry. Macrophage recruitment was investigated ex vivo using intestinal tissue-conditioned media and bone marrow-derived macrophages in a microchemotaxis assay. Similar to human NEC, TNBS enterocolitis in pups was marked by a macrophage-rich leukocyte infiltrate in affected tissue. In contrast, TNBS-enterocolitis in adult mice was associated with pleomorphic leukocyte infiltrates. Macrophage precursors were recruited to murine neonatal gastrointestinal tract by the chemokine CXCL5, a known chemoattractant for myeloid cells. We also demonstrated increased expression of CXCL5 in surgically resected tissue samples of human NEC, indicating that a similar pathway was active in NEC. We concluded that gut mucosal injury in the murine neonate is marked by a macrophage-rich leukocyte infiltrate, which contrasts with the pleomorphic leukocyte infiltrates in adult mice. In murine neonatal enterocolitis, macrophages were recruited to the inflamed gut mucosa by the chemokine CXCL5, indicating that CXCL5 and its cognate receptor CXCR2 merit further investigation as potential therapeutic targets in NEC.


2019 ◽  
pp. 53-60
Author(s):  
Article Editorial

One of the topical problems of modern medicine is the impact of microbiota on human health. The correlation between microbiome disorders and the development of diseases of the gastrointestinal tract, skin, respiratory system, obesity, autism and even depression has been established. Specialists pay most attention to the formation and maintenance of microbiota balance in children from birth, which is necessary for the preservation of their health in the future. Microbiota is studied by scientists from all over the world, which makes it possible to establish safe and effective strains of probiotic bacteria and on their basis to create a new generation of multiprobiotics. Creation of modern probiotics, their rational use and efficiency were discussed at the international symposium «Microbiotic disorders as an interdisciplinary problem of global level», held in the framework of the XVII Russian Congress «Innovative technologies in pediatrics and pediatric surgery» in October 2018. Dr. Ashton Harper (UK) and Professor Irina Zakharova shared their experience of effective dysbiosis correction with the help of modern English multiprobiotic Bak-Set.


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