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Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 289: H330-H335, 2005; doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00674.2004
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Paradoxical attenuation of leukocyte rolling in response to ischemia- reperfusion and extracorporeal blood circulation in inflamed tissue

Stephan C. Schäfer,1 Desiree N. Sehrt,1 Markus Kamler,2 Heinz Jakob,2 and Hans-Anton Lehr1

1Institute of Pathology, University of Mainz Medical Center, Mainz; and 2Clinic for Thorax and Cardiovascular Surgery, University Clinic of Essen Medical Center, Essen, Germany

Submitted 7 July 2004 ; accepted in final form 24 January 2005

In contrast to acute preparations such as the exteriorized mesentery or the cremaster muscle, chronically instrumented chamber models allow one to study the microcirculation under "physiological" conditions, i.e., in the absence of trauma-induced leukocyte rolling along the venular endothelium. To underscore the importance of studying the naive microcirculation, we implanted titanium dorsal skinfold chambers in hamsters and used intravital fluorescence microscopy to study venular leukocyte rolling in response to ischemia-reperfusion injury or extracorporeal blood circulation. The experiments were performed in chambers that fulfilled all well-established criteria for a physiological microcirculation as well as in chambers that showed various extents of leukocyte rolling due to trauma, hemorrhage, or inflammation. In ideal chambers with a physiological microcirculation (<30 rolling leukocytes/mm vessel circumference in 30 s), ischemia-reperfusion injury and extracorporeal blood circulation significantly stimulated leukocyte rolling along the venular endothelium and, subsequently, firm leukocyte adhesion. In contrast, both stimuli failed to elicit leukocyte rolling in borderline chambers (30–100 leukocytes/mm), and in blatantly inflamed chambers with yet higher numbers of rolling leukocytes at baseline (>100 leukocytes/mm), we observed a paradoxical reduction of leukocyte rolling after ischemia-reperfusion injury or extracorporeal blood circulation. A similar effect was observed when we superfused leukotriene B4 (LTB4) onto the chamber tissue. The initial increase in leukocyte rolling in response to an LTB4 challenge was reversed by a second superfusion 90 min later. These observations underscore 1) the benefit of studying leukocyte-endothelial cell interaction in chronically instrumented chamber models and 2) the necessity to strictly adhere to well-established criteria of a physiological microcirculation.

leukotriene B4; animal model; intravital microscopy



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: H.-A. Lehr, Institut Universitaire de Pathologie, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), Rue du Bugnon 25, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland (E-mail: Hans-Anton.Lehr{at}hospvd.ch)







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