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Small volume albumin administration protects against hemorrhagic shock-induced bone marrow dysfuncti |
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Small
volume albumin administration protects against hemorrhagic shock-induced bone
marrow dysfunction.
Osband AJ, Sifri ZC,
Wang L, Cohen D, Hauser CJ, Mohr AM, Deitch EA,
Livingston DH.
J Trauma. 2004 Feb;56(2):279-83.
SUMMARY:
BACKGROUND Unexpected immunomodulatory effects of
colloids and crystalloids prompted an investigation of albumin's ability to
prevent bone marrow (BM) suppression following trauma/hemorrhagic shock (T/HS:
laparotomy + MAP 30 for 90 mins).METHODS In vitro: Normal rat BM was plated for
granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and erythrocyte colony forming units (BFU-E)
with 2% v/v plasma from sham (T/SS) or T/HS rats and albumin (2-8 mg/mL). In vivo: Male rats (n = 4/group) were subjected to T/SS
or T/HS and resuscitated with shed blood and twice the volume as Lactated
Ringer's (LR) or blood and 1, 2, or 3 mL of albumin
(50 mg/mL). Bone marrow harvested 3 hours
post-resuscitation was plated for CFU-GM and BFU-E.RESULTS In vitro: T/HS plasma
decreased both CFU-GM and BFU-E growth as compared with T/SS, whereas increasing
doses of albumin showed dose-dependent improvement in progenitor growth (p <
0.05). In vivo: The suppression of BM red and white cell progenitor growth seen
in T/HS+LR rats as compared with T/SS was fully prevented by as little as 1
mL of albumin (p < 0.05).CONCLUSIONS Small doses of
albumin fully restore CFU-GM and BFU-E to sham values. We postulate that the
binding of circulating toxic factors by albumin may play a role in this
prevention of T/HS-induced BM suppression.
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