![]() |
|
|
Vol. 283, Issue 1, 59-65, 1997
Preclinical Research and Development, Astra Pain Control AB (T.M.,C-J.D.), Södertälje, Sweden, Department of Biology, Yamagata University (T.O.), Yamagata, Japan; Division of Clinical Immunology, Karolinska Hospital (E.F.), Stockholm, Sweden; Pharmacology 1, Astra Draco AB (K.R., E.S.), Lund, Sweden, Lab. de Pesquisas em Microcirculacáo (E.S.), Univ. do Estado do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
| |
Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Ropivacaine, a new local anesthetic, is currently being investigated
for the treatment of ulcerative colitis, with promising results so far.
The aim of this study was to examine anti-inflammatory properties of
ropivacaine with regard to its effects on vascular permeability and
inflammatory leukocyte behavior in vivo. The effects on
leukocyte rolling, firm adhesion and vascular permeability were
examined in the hamster cheek pouch microvasculature via intravital microscopy, and the effects on leukocyte adhesion molecules were examined in vitro by means of flow cytometry. In large
venules, leukocyte adhesion induced by topical leukotriene
B4 (LTB4) was almost completely inhibited
during the combined application of ropivacaine and LTB4.
The spontaneous rolling leukocyte flux was reduced by 72%, the rolling
leukocyte fraction by 47% and the total leukocyte flux, which reflects
blood flow, by 47%. In postcapillary venules, ropivacaine abolished
rolling and LTB4-induced firm adhesion of leukocytes.
LTB4 challenge also resulted in increased plasma exudation
that was almost completely inhibited by ropivacaine. Moreover,
ropivacaine inhibited the tumor necrosis factor
-induced up-regulation of CD11b/CD18 and L-selectin shedding by human leukocytes in vitro. Our results suggest that ropivacaine exerts
anti-inflammatory activity, and this appears to be mediated to a
significant extent by inhibition of both leukocyte rolling and
adhesion.
| |
Introduction |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Local
treatment of UC with lidocaine has been shown to result in good
symptomatic relief and restored mucosal integrity (Björck et al., 1993
). Ropivacaine, a new local anesthetic currently
under investigation for the treatment of UC, appears to improve
inflammatory endoscopic scores and to decrease clinical symptoms after
only 2 weeks of treatment (Arlander et al., 1996
).
Furthermore, ropivacaine has protective effects in a rat colitis model
(T. Martinsson, unpublished observation).
In addition to reversible block of nerve impulse propagation, local
anesthetics are known to affect a variety of other cell functions
(Hammer et al., 1985
; Moudgil et al., 1977
;
Dickstein et al., 1985
). Many of these effects are related
to leukocyte function; local anesthetics have been shown to inhibit
leukocyte phagocytic activity (Cullen and Haschke, 1974
), superoxide
production (Peck et al., 1985
; Irita et al.,
1986
) and adhesion (Giddon and Lindhe, 1972
; Rabinovitch and DeStefano,
1974
; MacGregor et al., 1980
). Lidocaine also reduces
leukocyte adherence in injured venules in vivo (Stewart
et al., 1974
), counteracts the endothelial damage induced by
sticking leukocytes (Stewart et al., 1974
) and inhibits granulocyte recruitment to sites of inflammation (MacGregor et al., 1980
). Ropivacaine itself has recently been shown to inhibit release of LTB4 and 5-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid from
leukocytes (Martinsson et al., 1997
).
The migration of leukocytes into tissues is a crucial event in the
inflammatory response. Leukocyte emigration is normally responsible for
the successful host response to tissue injury and infection, but it is
also potentially harmful and contributes to the pathology of different
inflammatory diseases such as UC (Babbs, 1992
). Accordingly, it has
been shown that suppression of neutrophil function may reduce tissue
damage in inflammatory diseases (Fujita et al., 1994
),
including UC (Palmen et al., 1995
).
The accumulation of leukocytes in inflamed tissue and the excessive
filtration of fluid and proteins that accompanies an inflammatory response are largely confined to small venules in the microcirculation (Granger and Kubes, 1994
). Leukocyte extravasation is initiated by
interactions between circulating leukocytes and activated endothelial cells lining the venules of inflamed tissue. Rolling of leukocytes along the venular wall is the earliest visible interaction. This is a
reversible event that can be followed by either the release of the
leukocytes back into the bloodstream or, upon chemotactic stimulation,
by arrest and firm adhesion to the endothelium and subsequent
diapedesis (Granger and Kubes, 1994
). Recent studies have revealed that
the leukocyte-endothelial interactions are mediated by different
classes of cell surface adhesion molecules. These include the
selectins, the integrins and members of the immunoglobulin superfamily
(Springer, 1994
). The selectins (E-, L- and P-selectin) are required
for leukocyte rolling along the vessel wall (Ley and Tedder, 1995
).
L-selectin is constitutively expressed on leukocytes, whereas E- and
P-selectin are inducible endothelial molecules (Springer, 1994
).
CD11b/CD18, a member of the integrin family, appears to be important
for the firm adhesion of leukocytes to the endothelium (Arfors et
al., 1987
). This receptor is constitutively expressed on the
surface of nonactivated leukocytes, and the surface expression of
CD11b/CD18 may be further increased by mobilization from intracellular
pools upon stimulation with various inflammatory stimuli (Todd et
al., 1984
).
Two important questions arise from the previous observations about the effects of local anesthetics on leukocyte activation and the promising results of ropivacaine in the treatment of UC. First, can ropivacaine inhibit leukocyte adhesion in vivo and/or the increased vascular permeability associated with inflammation? Second, can ropivacaine affect the expression of adhesion molecules on the surface of leukocytes? In the present study, we examined the effects of ropivacaine on increased vascular permeability and inflammatory leukocyte behavior in the hamster cheek pouch microvasculature by using intravital microscopy, and we examined its effects on the expression of adhesion molecules on human leukocytes in vitro by using flow cytometry.
| |
Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Intravital Microscopy
Male golden hamsters (90-120 g, Harlan-CPB, Austerlitz,
Netherlands) were used. The cheek pouch of sodium
pentobarbital-anesthetized animals was prepared for intravital
microscopy according to Duling (1973)
with modifications by
Svensjö (1978)
and Erlansson et al. (1989)
. The
exposed cheek pouch was superfused with a bicarbonate-buffered salt
solution (35°C) that was continuously equilibrated with 5% CO2 in N2 to maintain low oxygen tension (~4
kPa) and pH 7.35. A catheter in the left femoral vein was used for
infusion of FITC-labeled dextran (MW 150,000, Bioflor HB, Uppsala,
Sweden) or rhodamine (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). After positioning of the
cheek pouch under the microscope (Axioscope, Zeiss), a 30-min
equilibration period preceded the experiments. Rhodamine-labeled
leukocytes in venules were visualized with fluorescent light
epi-illumination using a ×25 water immersion lens (NA 0.60). The
microscopic images were televised (Sony Trinitron, Sony CCD camera) and
recorded with a Sony U-matic Video Tape Recorder for subsequent
off-line analysis. In another set of experiments, nonlabeled leukocytes
in postcapillary venules were studied with ordinary light
transillumination using a ×40 water immersion lens (NA 0.90).
Vascular permeability.
FITC-labeled dextran was injected
i.v. (25 mg/100 g b.wt.) as a macromolecular tracer. The increase in
microvascular permeability for large molecules was quantified by
counting fluorescent leakage sites at postcapillary venules (Erlansson
et al., 1989
). The number of leaks per square centimeter of
cheek pouch area was counted before and during 30 min after topical
application of LTB4 (10 nM; Sigma; repeated four times with
45-min intervals). Ropivacaine (Naropin, Astra, Södertälje,
Sweden) was applied to the superfusate for 15 min, starting 10 min
before the second (10 µM ropivacaine) and the fourth (100 µM
ropivacaine) LTB4 applications. The peak number of leakage
sites, which consistently occurred at 5 min after the start of
LTB4 application, was used for statistical calculations.
Leukocyte behavior. The cheek pouches were subjected to four repeated local applications of 10 nM LTB4 for 5 min with 45- to 60-min intervals. Before the second and fourth LTB4 applications, 100 µM ropivacaine was applied locally for 15 min starting 10 min before LTB4; this resulted in two experimental series termed first and second. Venular segments with a diameter of 40 µm and a length of 150 µm were selected for observation of free-flowing, rolling and adherent leukocytes. All systemic leukocytes were labeled in vivo by an i.v. injection of rhodamine (2 µg) immediately before observations. The weak red fluorescence of rhodamine-labeled leukocytes was amplified using a Hamamatsu Image Intensifier and recorded for subsequent off-line analysis. Values for free-flowing, rolling and firmly adherent leukocytes were obtained immediately before LTB4 application and during and after ropivacaine and/or LTB4 application. Free-flowing leukocytes (with the same velocity as erythrocytes) were determined by counting the number of leukocytes passing a line perpendicular to the vessel per minute. Rolling leukocytes were defined as leukocytes that were in contact with the venular endothelium and had a velocity lower than that of free-flowing leukocytes, and the rolling leukocyte flux (cells per minute) was determined as described for free-flowing leukocytes. The leukocyte rolling fraction was determined at indicated time-points by dividing the rolling leukocyte flux by the total leukocyte flux (flux of rolling leukocytes plus that of free-flowing leukocytes). Cells were considered to be adherent if they remained stationary for more than 30 sec. Adherent cells were expressed as number of leukocytes/10,000 µm2 inner surface of the vessel. In a second set of experiments, postcapillary venules with a diameter of 10 µm and a length of 100 µm were selected for observation of leukocytes with ordinary light transillumination. In these experiments, rolling leukocyte flux and adherent leukocytes were counted.
Vessel diameters. The diameters of venules and arterioles were measured off-line using an image-shearing monitor (IPM, LaMesa, CA).
Expression of Cell Surface Adhesion Molecules
Preparation of leukocytes.
EDTA blood from healthy human
donors (n = 19) was hemolyzed by dilution (1:20) in
4°C isotonic NH4Cl-EDTA lysing solution (154 mM
NH4Cl, 10 mM KHCO4, 0.1 mM EDTA, pH 7.2). After
incubation for 5 min at 15°C, the leukocytes were centrifuged
(300 × g, 4°C) for 5 min. The leukocyte pellets were
washed once in 4°C 0.15 M PBS supplemented with 0.1 M EDTA and 0.02%
sodium azide (PBS-EDTA). This cell preparation procedure minimizes
spontaneous leukocyte activation (Lundahl et al., 1991
).
Leukocyte activation.
The basic medium used during leukocyte
activation was RPMI 1640 (Gibco Ltd., Paisley, U.K.) containing 0.01 M
HEPES and 5% fetal calf serum (Gibco Ltd.). TNF-
(R&D Systems,
Abingdon, U.K.) was diluted to a final concentration of
10
10 g/ml. Ropivacaine and lidocaine (Xylocaine, Astra)
were diluted in medium to make serial dilutions ranging from
10
5 M to 10
3 M. The leukocytes were
incubated with or without TNF-
for 15 min (L-selectin) or 30 min
(CD11b/CD18), both at 37°C. The cells were treated with varying
concentrations of ropivacaine, lidocaine or an equal volume of medium,
added together with TNF-
. The activation was stopped by addition of
cold PBS-EDTA, and the leukocytes were washed once, resuspended in 100 µl PBS-EDTA and kept on ice. As a control of spontaneous cell
activation at 37°C, leukocytes were also incubated at 4°C without
TNF-
and local anesthetics. The viability of the cells before and
after incubation with ropivacaine or lidocaine was >95%, as
determined by the trypan blue exclusion test.
Flow cytometric analysis of adhesion molecule expression. The expression of CD11b and L-selectin on granulocytes and monocytes was analyzed by adding 5 µl of PE-conjugated monoclonal anti-CD11b (DAKO A/S, Glostrup, Denmark) or 10 µl FITC-conjugated anti-L-selectin antibody (Becton Dickinson, Mountain View, CA) to the leukocytes prepared and treated as described above. The suspensions were incubated on ice for 30 min, washed in cold PBS-EDTA and resuspended in 0.5 ml of cold PBS-EDTA before analysis. Appropriate concentrations of iso- and subtype-matched control antibodies were used to define the cutoff for positive fluorescence. Positive fluorescence was the 99th percentile of the distribution of the cells labeled with the respective control antibody (PE-conjugated IgG2a and FITC-conjugated IgG2a for CD11b and L-selectin, respectively).
Finally, the cells were analyzed in an EPICS Profile II (Coulter Inc., Hialhea, FL) flow cytometer. Granulocytes and monocytes are represented by well-separated clusters based on light-scattering properties. Discriminating frames were placed around the granulocyte and monocyte fields. The instrument gives the actual number of cells and the mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) of the cell population within the field.Intracellular Free Ca++ Concentration
Leukocytes were prepared as described previously. Intracellular
free Ca++ concentration was measured as described by
Tuominen et al. (1994)
. Briefly, the cells were loaded with
2.5 µM fura-2 AM in Ca++- and Mg++-free
buffer
Hanks' Balanced Salt Solution (Gibco Ltd.) supplemented with
10 mM glucose
at 37°C for 30 min. The cells were washed once (440 × g, 5 min) and resuspended in buffer
(106 cells/ml) and stored at room temperature. Aliquots of
2 × 106 cells were diluted in
Ca++-containing (1 mM) buffer, and fluorescence was
recorded at 340/380 nm (excitation) and 510 nm (emission) in a Perkin
Elmer spectrofluorometer equipped with a thermostatically controlled
cuvette holder (37°C) and constant stirring. The dye response was
calibrated by the sequential addition of 10 µM ionomycin and 50 mM
EGTA at the end of the experiment to give the maximum and minimum
fluoresence, respectively.
Statistical methods. Mean values and standard errors (S.E.M.) were calculated. The results were tested by analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by Student's t test for paired comparisons. P < .05 was considered significant.
| |
Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Leukocyte expression of CD11b/CD18.
The granulocytes incubated
at 37°C were spontaneously activated to some extent; that is, the
expression of CD11b/CD18 on the cell surface was increased 3-fold,
measured as increased MFI values (from 9 ± 1.4 to 36 ± 3.4). TNF-
stimulation further increased expression of CD11b/CD18 by
80% (65 ± 2.4, P < .001). Ropivacaine
100 µM and
lidocaine
300 µM significantly reduced this up-regulation, whereas
the lower concentrations were inactive in this regard (fig.
1). The TNF-
- induced CD11b/CD18
up-regulation was abolished by the local anesthetics at 1 mM. The
expression of CD11b/CD18 on monocytes after activation with TNF-
was
lower than the expression on granulocytes; however, the effect mediated
by the local anesthetics was similar to that described above (data not
shown). The 100 µM concentration of ropivacaine was chosen for the
in vivo experiments because this was the lowest
concentration with significant effects on CD11b/CD18 expression. This
concentration is also in the therapeutic range obtained in the colon of
patients treated rectally with ropivacaine (Arlander et al.,
1996
).
|
Leukocyte adhesion.
Figure 2
shows the number of adherent cells in venules (ø = 40 µm) of the
hamster cheek pouch at different time-points, together with the rolling
leukocyte flux. The base-line venular leukocyte adhesion was 10.2 ± 3.6 cells/10,000 µm2. Superfusion with
LTB4 for 5 min significantly increased the number of
adherent cells by 78%. This increase was reversible and returned to
base line after termination of LTB4 application. Addition
of ropivacaine to the superfusion solution significantly reduced the
leukocyte adhesion response to LTB4 to a value comparable to the base-line value (fig. 2; table 1).
Ropivacaine showed a tendency to reduce spontaneous adhesion, but this
effect was not significant. The results could be repeated in the second
series of experiments in the same preparation. In this second series, LTB4 increased leukocyte adhesion by 115% (compared with
78% in the first LTB4 application), and ropivacaine
inhibited the induced adhesion completely (data not shown).
|
|
Leukocyte rolling. The base-line rolling leukocyte flux in venules was 26.6 ± 6.9 cells/min (table 1). As a result of the increased adhesion induced by LTB4, rolling decreased markedly (94%) during the 5-min LTB4 application (fig. 2). Ropivacaine reduced the spontaneous rolling flux by 72% without causing increased adhesion (fig. 2; table 1). During the combined application of ropivacaine and LTB4, the rolling leukocyte flux was further reduced (76%) despite the inhibition of LTB4-induced adhesion during this time. The leukocyte rolling fraction was calculated, and during base-line conditions, the fraction of rolling cells was 41% ± 4.2% (table 1). Ropivacaine reduced the rolling fraction by half. In the second series in the same preparations, ropivacaine significantly reduced the spontaneous leukocyte rolling flux and the rolling fraction by 57% and 47%, respectively (data not shown).
In postcapillary venules, the base-line rolling flux was 45.0 ± 11.0 cells/min, and ropivacaine reduced this rolling by 96% (table 1). The effects of ropivacaine were found to be reversible. That is, after washout of applied LTB4 and ropivacaine, the number of rolling and adherent cells returned to control values, and the cheek pouch regained normal responsiveness to LTB4 (data not shown).Total flux of leukocytes. The total number of free-flowing and rolling leukocytes, a value that reflects blood flow, is shown in table 1. The base-line total leukocyte flux was 61.8 ± 11.6 cells/min, and ropivacaine reduced the total flux by 47%. Ropivacaine significantly reduced the total leukocyte flux by 35% on repetition of the experiments in the same preparation (data not shown).
Vessel diameters. Ropivacaine (100 µM) applied topically for 15 min significantly reduced arteriolar diameters by 43% ± 4.4% (P < .05, n = 6), whereas venular diameters were not significantly affected.
Vascular permeability.
In line with previous observations
(Erlansson et al., 1989
), topical LTB4 challenge
in the hamster cheek pouch resulted in reversible increases in the
number of postcapillary leakage sites (plasma exudation). When 10 or
100 µM ropivacaine was applied topically before LTB4, the
peak number of leakage sites was markedly reduced (fig.
3). The effect was fully reversible on
washout after 10 µM ropivacaine, but it was only partially reversible
after 100 µM.
|
Leukocyte expression of L-selectin.
L-selectin is rapidly shed
by proteolytic cleavage after leukocyte activation (Kishimoto et
al., 1989
). Accordingly, the granulocyte membrane expression of
L-selectin was decreased by 50% (from 13 ± 1.8 to 6.5 ± 0.3) after 15 min of activation (TNF-
) as compared with controls.
Ropivacaine and lidocaine dose-dependently suppressed L-selectin
shedding, the lowest concentrations with significant effects being 100 and 300 µM, respectively, (fig. 4). In
addition, ropivacaine inhibited the shedding of L-selectin on
monocytes. However, this effect was not so pronounced as that seen for
granulocytes (data not shown). Lidocaine was inactive in this regard.
|
Intracellular Ca++ concentrations.
Stimulation of
leukocytes with LTB4 (0.01, 0.1 and 1 µM) induced a
dose-dependent rise in [Ca++]i
from a basal
level of 115 nM to 290, 350 and 405 nM, respectively (n = 4). Pretreatment of the leukocytes for 10 min with 1 mM ropivacaine did not affect the LTB4-induced Ca++ transients
significantly, i.e., from 175 nM to 350, 400, and 465 nM, respectively.
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
A key event in inflammation is the recruitment of leukocytes to sites of inflammation. This recruitment consists of several sequential steps, including leukocyte rolling along the endothelium followed by firm adhesion of the leukocytes to the endothelial cells. In the present study, we show that ropivacaine can reduce both the rolling and the firm adhesion in vivo, as well as the increased vascular permeability associated with leukocyte adhesion. Furthermore, ropivacaine was found to inhibit the induced expression of CD11b/CD18 on leukocytes in vitro.
Ropivacaine almost completely inhibited the LTB4-induced
leukocyte adhesion in both postcapillary and larger venules. This may
have been the result of a direct effect on firm adhesion and/or, given
that venular rolling is a prerequisite for firm adhesion (Lindbom
et al., 1992
), an indirect effect mediated through
inhibition of leukocyte rolling. Because LTB4 has been
shown to stimulate leukocyte adhesion through CD11b/CD18 (Arfors
et al., 1987
; Tonnesen et al., 1989
), our
in vitro finding that ropivacaine inhibited up-regulation of
neutrophil CD11b/CD18 indicates that the observed effect of ropivacaine
on adhesion was, at least in part, mediated through reduction of
CD11b/CD18 expression. Interestingly, it has been suggested that
CD11b/CD18 is involved in the interactions between intestinal
epithelial cells and neutrophils (Parkos et al., 1995
),
which implies that ropivacaine may also interfere with transepithelial
leukocyte migration.
The mechanism by which the local anesthetics inhibited expression of
CD11b/CD18 is unknown. However, because local anesthetics are known to
act on ion channels to decrease membrane permeability to
Na+ and K+ in nerves and may have a similar
action on other cell types, one possibility is that local anesthetics
interact with different ion channels on the leukocytes. Leonard
et al. (1992)
have found that the membrane potential of
resting T cells is set by voltage-activated channels and that blockage
of these channels is sufficient to depolarize resting human T cells and
prevent their activation. Thus, if the membrane potential is part of
the leukocyte activation system, the underlying mechanism for the
observed inhibition of CD11b/CD18 expression by local anesthetics could
be explained in these terms. Another mechanism by which ropivacaine
could inhibit the expression of CD11b/CD18 is through the inhibition of
LTB4 signal transduction, e.g., by an action on calcium
channels or stores. However, the results so far do not support a
hypothesis of an action on leukocyte calcium mechanisms. It could also
be speculated that the effect on adhesion is due to inhibition of endogenous LTB4. This is unlikely, however, because
5-lipoxygenase inhibitors have been shown to be ineffective in acute
(as in this study) leukocyte-dependent LTB4-induced
responses in the hamster cheek pouch (Raud, 1989
).
The close relationship between initial leukocyte rolling flux and
subsequent adhesion (Lindbom et al., 1992
; Mayrovitz, 1992
) suggests another mechanism by which ropivacaine might inhibit adhesion:
inhibition of leukocyte rolling. We found that ropivacaine reduced
venular rolling leukocyte flux in vivo by 70%, and, in contrast to the LTB4-mediated effect, the effect of
ropivacaine was not due to increased adhesion. Inhibition of the
rolling flux may be the result of a reduced fraction of rolling
leukocytes and/or reduced delivery of leukocytes (i.e., blood flow).
Ropivacaine was found to inhibit the rolling leukocyte fraction by
approximately 50% compared with the control condition. Because the
magnitude of the rolling leukocyte fraction is dependent on the
selectins and/or their ligands (Ley and Tedder, 1995
), the latter
finding indicates that ropivacaine somehow interfered with selectin
expression or function. It has been demonstrated that the spontaneous
leukocyte rolling observed after preparation of tissues for intravital
microscopy is mediated by both L- and P-selectin (Todd et
al., 1984
; Doré, et al., 1993
; von Andrian
et al., 1991). However, it is unlikely that the inhibitory
effect of ropivacaine on the leukocyte rolling was related to
L-selectin expression, because treatment with 100 µM ropivacaine
retained surface expression of L-selectin on the granulocytes. This
leaves endothelial P-selectin as a possible target of ropivacaine.
Furthermore, local anesthetics have been suggested to "stabilize"
the cell membrane of leukocytes (Young and MacKenzie, 1992
), and
L-selectin and the P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 are localized on
the microvilli of neutrophils to improve the presentation of these
molecules to the endothelium (Patel et al., 1995
).
Therefore, it is possible that ropivacaine reduces rolling by changing
leukocyte cell membrane morphology and adhesion molecule distribution.
The inhibition of the rolling leukocyte fraction accounted for
approximately 50% of the effect of ropivacaine on the rolling leukocyte flux. The remaining effect by ropivacaine on the rolling flux
appeared to be related to a reduction in blood flow, detected as a
partial arteriolar constriction and as a significant reduction in the
total leukocyte flux (which reflects blood flow), a value that is known
to be correlated with the rolling leukocyte flux (Thorlacius et
al., 1995
). We thus suggest that the inhibitory effect by
ropivacaine on leukocyte rolling was partly due to changes in
leukocyte-endothelium adhesive interactions and partly related to
alterations in blood flow.
Ropivacaine markedly inhibited the LTB4-induced plasma
leakage in a dose-dependent and reversible manner. Because
LTB4-induced plasma extravasation is mediated by leukocytes
(Björk et al., 1982
; Kurose et al., 1994
),
the inhibition of plasma leakage by ropivacaine may be a result of its
ability to reduce leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions.
The inhibitory effect of ropivacaine on leukocyte adhesion differs from
the anti-inflammatory action of glucocorticoids, which are commonly
used for the local treatment of UC. In contrast to ropivacaine,
glucocorticoids do not inhibit the increased endothelial adhesion
induced by chemotactic factors but instead inhibit the leukocyte
extravasation process (Oda and Katori, 1992
). Interestingly, metronidazole, a potent antimicrobial agent that is gaining recognition as a possible mode of therapy for treatment of UC, has effects comparable to those of ropivacaine. This agent has been shown to
inhibit LTB4-induced adhesion in the microcirculation of
the rat mesentery (Arndt et al., 1994
). With regard to
lidocaine, another drug tested for treatment of UC, our study confirms
previous observations that this local anesthetic can inhibit CD11b/CD18 up-regulation and L-selectin down-regulation on neutrophils (Ohsaka et al., 1994
). However, we found that lidocaine was 2.5 times less potent than ropivacaine in inhibiting the CD11b/CD18
expression.
In conclusion, ropivacaine was found to inhibit inflammatory leukocyte rolling, firm adhesion and the associated increased vascular permeability in vivo. Moreover, our in vitro findings showed that ropivacaine had an inhibitory effect on induced expression of CD11b/CD18. Because leukocyte-endothelial cell interactions represent early and rate-limiting steps in intestinal inflammatory processes, these findings may help explain the beneficial effect of ropivacaine seen in the treatment of UC.
| |
Acknowledgment |
|---|
We thank Dr. Anders Haegerstrand, Dr. Joachim Lundahl and Dr. Johan Raud for valuable discussions and helpful comments on the manuscript.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication June 30, 1997.
Received for publication March 6, 1997.
1 This study was supported by grants from the National Associations for the Prevention of Asthma and Allergy, the Swedish Medical Society, Consul Th. C. Berghs Foundation, the Swedish Work Environment Fund and the Swedish Medical Research Council (grant no. 16X-105).
Send reprint requests to: Titti Martinsson, Astra Pain Control AB, Preclinical R&D, Novum Unit, S-141 57 Huddinge, Sweden.
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
FITC, fluorescein isothiocyanate, fMLP,
formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine;
LTB4, leukotriene
B4, MFI, mean fluorescence intensity;
PBS, phosphate-buffered saline;
PE, phycoerythrin;
TNF-
, tumor necrosis
factor
;
UC, ulcerative colitis.
| |
References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
a pharmacokinetic and exploratory clinical study.
Alimentary Pharmacol. Ther.
10: 73-81, 1996[Medline].
-induced macromolecular leakage in the hamster cheek pouch.
Prostaglandins Med.
1: 397-410, 1978[Medline].
2 integrins in vivo.
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
88: 7538-7542, 1991This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
S. C. Schafer, D. N. Sehrt, M. Kamler, H. Jakob, and H.-A. Lehr Paradoxical attenuation of leukocyte rolling in response to ischemia- reperfusion and extracorporeal blood circulation in inflamed tissue Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol, July 1, 2005; 289(1): H330 - H335. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. Gottschalk, M.-A. Burmeister, P. Radtke, M. Krieg, F. Farokhzad, S. Kreissl, M. Strauss, and T. Standl Continuous Wound Infiltration with Ropivacaine Reduces Pain and Analgesic Requirement After Shoulder Surgery Anesth. Analg., October 1, 2003; 97(4): 1086 - 1091. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
K. Hahnenkamp, G. Theilmeier, H. K. Van Aken, and C. W. Hoenemann The Effects of Local Anesthetics on Perioperative Coagulation, Inflammation, and Microcirculation Anesth. Analg., June 1, 2002; 94(6): 1441 - 1447. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
T. Martinsson, T. Ljung, C. Rubio, and P. M. Hellström Beneficial Effects of Ropivacaine in Rat Experimental Colitis J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., November 1, 1999; 291(2): 642 - 647. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
![]() |
T. Martinsson Ropivacaine Inhibits Serum-Induced Proliferation of Colon Adenocarcinoma Cells In Vitro J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., February 1, 1999; 288(2): 660 - 664. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||