Methylprednisolone Hemisuccinate
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Publication
Journal: Nature
June/24/1980
Abstract
In near-physiological concentrations, glucocorticoid hormones cause the death of several types of normal and neoplastic lymphoid cell, but the mechanisms involved are unknown. One of the earliest structural changes in the dying cell is widespread chromatin condensation, of the type characteristic of apoptosis, the mode of death frequently observed where cell deletion seems to be 'programmed'. It is shown here that this morphological change is closely associated with excision of nucleosome chains from nuclear chromatin, apparently through activation of an intracellular, but non-lysosomal, endonuclease.
Authors
Publication
Journal: Journal of Pathology
April/15/1984
Abstract
In glucocorticoid-treated rat thymocytes and the murine lymphoid cell lines L5178 and S49 the morphology of apoptosis is associated with chromatin cleavage. The cleavage is at internucleosomal sites, apparently through activation of an endogenous endonuclease. In variants of the cell lines selected for resistance to glucocorticoid, neither apoptosis nor chromatin cleavage were observed after steroid treatment, and steroid receptors were undetectable. In thymocytes, both the morphological changes of apoptosis and chromatin cleavage were inhibited by cycloheximide and actinomycin D. The calcium-magnesium ionophore A23187 induced apoptosis and chromatin cleavage in thymocytes, and these effects were also inhibited by cycloheximide. The data confirm that the condensed chromatin which characterizes apoptosis morphologically consists of endogenously digested chromatin fragments. They also provide support for the view that at least some cells enter apoptosis by a process dependent upon macromolecular synthesis.
Publication
Journal: Critical Care Medicine
June/6/1989
Abstract
The sepsis syndrome represents a systemic response to infection and is defined as hypothermia (temperature less than 96 degrees F) or hyperthermia (greater than 101 degrees F), tachycardia (greater than 90 beat/min), tachypnea (greater than 20 breath/min), clinical evidence of an infection site and with at least one end-organ demonstrating inadequate perfusion or dysfunction expressed as poor or altered cerebral function, hypoxemia (PaO2 less than 75 torr), elevated plasma lactate, or oliguria (urine output less than 30 ml/h or 0.5 ml/kg body weight.h without corrective therapy). One hundred ninety-one patients with the sepsis syndrome were evaluated prospectively and comprised the placebo group of a multicenter trial of methylprednisolone in sepsis syndrome and septic shock. Forty-five percent of the patients were found to be bacteremic. Thirty-six percent of the patients were in septic shock (sepsis syndrome plus a systolic BP less than 90 mm Hg or a decrease from baseline in systolic BP greater than 40 mm Hg) on study entry. An additional 23% of the patients developed shock after admission with 70% doing so within 24 h of study entry. Shock reversal occurred with a 73% frequency. Twenty-five percent of the patients developed the adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Mortality for the patients with sepsis syndrome who did not develop shock was 13%. Mortality for the groups of patients with shock on admission and shock postadmission was 27.5% and 43.2%, respectively. Forty-seven percent of the bacteremic patients developed shock after study admission compared to 29.6% of the nonbacteremic patients (p less than .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurosurgery
January/13/1992
Abstract
The 1-year follow-up data of a multicenter randomized controlled trial of methylprednisolone (30 mg/kg bolus and 5.4 mg/kg/hr for 23 hours) or naloxone (5.4 mg/kg bolus and 4.0 mg/kg/hr for 23 hours) treatment for acute spinal cord injury are reported and compared with placebo results. In patients treated with methylprednisolone within 8 hours of injury, increased recovery of neurological function was seen at 6 weeks and at 6 months and continued to be observed 1 year after injury. For motor function, this difference was statistically significant (p = 0.030), and was found in patients with total sensory and motor loss in the emergency room (p = 0.019) and in those with some preservation of motor and sensory function (p = 0.024). Naloxone-treated patients did not show significantly greater recovery. Patients treated after 8 hours of injury recovered less motor function if receiving methylprednisolone (p = 0.08) or naloxone (p = 0.10) as compared with those given placebo. Complication and mortality rates were similar in either group of treated patients as compared with the placebo group. The authors conclude that treatment with the study dose of methylprednisolone is indicated for acute spinal cord trauma, but only if it can be started within 8 hours of injury.
Publication
Journal: Archives of ophthalmology (Chicago, Ill. : 1960)
August/4/2003
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To identify factors associated with a high and low risk of developing multiple sclerosis after an initial episode of optic neuritis.
METHODS
Three hundred eighty-eight patients who experienced acute optic neuritis between July 1, 1988, and June 30, 1991, were followed up prospectively for the development of multiple sclerosis. Consenting patients were reassessed after 10 to 13 years.
RESULTS
The 10-year risk of multiple sclerosis was 38% (95% confidence interval, 33%-43%). Patients (160) who had 1 or more typical lesions on the baseline magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan of the brain had a 56% risk; those with no lesions (191) had a 22% risk (P<.001, log rank test). Among the patients who had no lesions on MRI, male gender and optic disc swelling were associated with a lower risk of multiple sclerosis, as was the presence of the following atypical features for optic neuritis: no light perception vision; absence of pain; and ophthalmoscopic findings of severe optic disc edema, peripapillary hemorrhages, or retinal exudates.
CONCLUSIONS
The 10-year risk of multiple sclerosis following an initial episode of acute optic neuritis is significantly higher if there is a single brain MRI lesion; higher numbers of lesions do not appreciably increase that risk. However, even when brain lesions are seen on MRI, more than 40% of the patients will not develop clinical multiple sclerosis after 10 years. In the absence of MRI lesions, certain demographic and clinical features seem to predict a very low likelihood of developing multiple sclerosis. This natural history information is a critical input for estimating a patient's 10-year multiple sclerosis risk and for weighing the benefit of initiating prophylactic treatment at the time of optic neuritis or other initial demyelinating events in the central nervous system.
Publication
Journal: Annals of Internal Medicine
November/22/1983
Abstract
The efficacy of corticosteroid treatment in the prophylaxis of the fat embolism syndrome was evaluated in a prospective, randomized, double-blind study of high-risk patients with long-bone fractures. Using a set of objective diagnostic criteria, we saw a significant difference in the incidence of the syndrome between corticosteroid- (0 of 21) and placebo-treated patients (9 of 41) (p less than 0.05). There were no complications related to corticosteroid treatment. No routine laboratory or physical findings reliably predicted the development of the fat embolism syndrome except petechial rash, which occurred only in 5 placebo-treated patients who developed the syndrome. Complement activation was present in all patients studied who had the syndrome (5 of 27) but also in many patients who did not meet our diagnostic criteria, suggesting a multifactorial cause. These data support the prophylactic value of corticosteroid treatment in patients at high risk for the fat embolism syndrome, particularly if several unfavorable predictors are present.
Publication
Journal: Ophthalmology
April/14/1999
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To review the efficacy and side effects of topical nonpreserved corticosteroid therapy for treatment of severe keratoconjunctivitis associated with Sjögren syndrome.
METHODS
Retrospective, noncomparative case series.
METHODS
Twenty-one patients with Sjögren syndrome-associated keratoconjunctivitis sicca and annoying ocular irritation.
METHODS
Treatment with topical nonpreserved methylprednisolone sodium succinate.
METHODS
Symptom severity, frequency of instillation of artificial tears, corneal fluorescein staining scores, resolution of filamentary keratitis, steroid-related side effects.
RESULTS
Before starting methylprednisolone therapy, all patients were experiencing moderate-to-severe eye irritation despite prior punctal occlusion in most cases and frequent use of nonpreserved artificial tears by all. After 2 weeks of topical application, three to four times per day, moderate (43%) or complete (57%) relief of irritation symptoms was experienced by all patients and no complications were observed. An average decrease in corneal fluorescein scores of 2.6 +/- 0.5 points (on a 12-point scale) was observed, and filamentary keratitis resolved in all ten eyes with this condition. Therapy was stopped after 2 weeks in eight patients, and six of these patients reported that their symptoms remained at a tolerable level for weeks to months. Lower dose steroid therapy was continued in the remaining patients, whose symptoms worsened after attempted weaning. Complications of corticosteroid therapy in patients receiving prolonged therapy included increased intraocular pressure in one patient at 3 months, worsening of pre-existing posterior subcapsular cataracts in one patient at 6 months, and formation of posterior subcapsular cataracts in another patient at 6 months.
CONCLUSIONS
These findings indicate that topical nonpreserved methylprednisolone is an effective treatment option for patients suffering from severe keratoconjunctivitis sicca who continue to experience bothersome eye irritation despite maximum aqueous enhancement therapies. They also suggest that inflammation is a key pathogenic factor in this condition. Careful monitoring is essential in dry eye patients treated with corticosteroids for more than 2 weeks because steroid-related complications (increased intraocular pressure and cataract formation) were observed after several months of therapy in this series. Because of the chronic nature of this disease and the likelihood of patients developing steroid-related complications with their long-term use, topical nonpreserved methylprednisolone therapy appears to be most appropriate for short-term "pulse" treatment of exacerbations of keratoconjunctivitis sicca.
Publication
Journal: Drug Safety
February/21/2001
Abstract
BACKGROUND
A single preoperative high dose of methylprednisolone (15 to 30 mg/kg) has been advocated in surgery, because it may inhibit the surgical stress response and thereby improve postoperative outcome and convalescence. However, these potential clinical benefits must be weighed against possible adverse effects.
OBJECTIVE
To conduct a risk-benefit analysis using a meta-analysis, to compare complication rates and clinical advantages associated with the use of high dose methylprednisolone in surgical patients.
METHODS
Randomised controlled trials of high dose methylprednisolone in elective and trauma surgery were systematically searched for in various literature databases. Outcome data on adverse effects, postoperative pain and hospital stay were extracted and statistically pooled in fixed-effects meta-analyses.
RESULTS
We located 51 studies in elective cardiac and noncardiac surgery, as well as traumatology. Pooled data failed to show any significant increase in complication rates. In patients treated with corticosteroids, nonsignificantly more gastrointestinal bleeding and wound complications were observed; the 95% confidence interval boundaries of the numbers-needed-to-harm were 59 and 38, respectively. The only significant finding was a reduction of pulmonary complications (risk difference -3.5%; 95% confidence interval -1.0 to -6.1), mainly in trauma patients.
CONCLUSIONS
For patients undergoing surgical procedures, a perioperative single-shot administration of high dose methylprednisolone is not associated with a significant increase in the incidence of adverse effects. In patients with multiple fractures, limited evidence suggests promising benefits of glucocorticoids on pulmonary complications.
Publication
Journal: Chest
November/14/1991
Abstract
Most patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) survive the initial insult which caused respiratory failure only to succumb later to sepsis caused by nosocomial pneumonia or to pulmonary fibrosis. Clinical criteria and analysis of the tracheal aspirate are notoriously inadequate for establishing a diagnosis of ventilator-associated pneumonia. We implemented a comprehensive diagnostic protocol to determine the cause of sepsis in ARDS patients who had been ventilated for more than three days and who had no bronchoscopic evidence of pneumonia. Nine patients with late ARDS who had fever (89 percent), leukocytosis (89 percent), a new localized infiltrate (78 percent), purulent tracheal secretions (89 percent), low systemic vascular resistance (50 percent), and marked uptake of gallium in the lungs (100 percent) had no source of infection identified. Open-lung biopsy specimens from seven patients showed the fibroproliferative phase of diffuse alveolar damage and confirmed absence of pneumonia. Treatment with prolonged high doses of corticosteroids was associated with a marked and rapid improvement in lung injury score (p less than 0.003 at five days). Our findings indicate that the fibroproliferative process occurring in the lungs of patients with late ARDS gives rise to clinical manifestations identical to those of pneumonia and is potentially responsive to steroid treatment.
Publication
Journal: Chest
June/14/1994
Abstract
Pulmonary fibroproliferation (PFP) is directly or indirectly the leading cause of death in patients with late ARDS. We previously reported our experience using intravenous corticosteroids (IVC) in 8 patients with late ARDS and now have expanded our observation to a total of 25 patients with severe fibroproliferation (mean lung injury score [LIS] 3) and progressive respiratory failure (RF). Thirteen patients had open-lung biopsy before treatment. Patients were started on IVC treatment (IVCT) an average of 15 +/- 7.5 days into mechanical ventilation (MV). Significant physiologic improvement (SPI) to IVCT was defined as a reduction in LIS of greater than 1 point or an increase in PaO2:FIO2 ratio of greater than 100. We observed three patterns of response: rapid responders (RR) had an SPI by day 7 (n = 15); delayed responders (DR) had an SPI by day 14 (n = 6); nonresponders (NR) were without SPI by day 14 (n = 4). Overall the following significant mean changes were seen within 7 days of IVCT: LIS from 3 to 2 (p = 0.001), PaO2:FIO2 from 162 to 234 (p = 0.0004), PEEP from 11 to 6.8 cm H2O (p = 0.001), chest radiograph score from 3.8 to 3.0 (p = 0.009), and VE from 16 to 13.6 L/min (p = 0.01). Development of pneumonia was related to the pattern of response. Surveillance bronchoscopy was effective in identifying pneumonia in eight afebrile patients. Nineteen of 25 (76 percent) patients survived the ICU admission. Comparisons were made between survivors (S) and nonsurvivors (NS) and among the three groups of responders. At the time ARDS developed, no physiologic or demographic variable could discriminate between S and NS. At the time of IVCT, only liver failure was more frequent in nonsurvivors (p = 0.035). Histologic findings at open-lung biopsy and pattern of physiologic response clearly predicted outcome. The presence of preserved alveolar architecture (p = 0.045), myxoid type fibrosis (p = 0.045), coexistent intraluminal bronchiolar fibrosis (p = 0.0045), and lack of arteriolar subintimal fibroproliferation (p = 0.045) separated S from NS. ICU survival rate was 86 percent in responders and 25 percent in nonresponders (p = 0.03). Only one death resulted from refractory respiratory failure.
Publication
Journal: Langmuir
May/14/2007
Abstract
The ability of low-frequency ultrasound (LFUS) to release encapsulated drugs from sterically stabilized liposomes in a controlled manner was demonstrated. Three liposomal formulations having identical lipid bilayer compositions and a similar size ( approximately 100 nm) but differing in their encapsulated drugs and methods of drug loading have been tested. Two of the drugs, doxorubicin and methylpredinisolone hemisuccinate, were remote loaded by transmembrane gradients (ammonium sulfate and calcium acetate, respectively). The third drug, cisplatin, was loaded passively into the liposomes. For all three formulations, a short exposure to LFUS (<3 min) released nearly 80% of the drug. The magnitude of drug release was a function of LFUS amplitude and actual exposure time, irrespective of whether irradiation was pulsed or continuous. Furthermore, no change in liposome size distribution or in the chemical properties of the lipids or of the released drugs occurred due to exposure to LFUS. Based on our results, we propose that the mechanism of release is a transient introduction of porelike defects in the liposome membrane, which occurs only during exposure to LFUS, after which the membrane reseals. This explains the observed uptake of the membrane-impermeable fluorophore pyranine from the extraliposomal medium during exposure to LFUS. The implications of these findings for clinical applications of controlled drug release from liposomes are discussed.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Neurosurgery
August/25/1982
Publication
Journal: Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation
December/9/2003
Abstract
BACKGROUND
IgA nephropathy is an immune-complex glomerulopathy that can result in capillary or extra-capillary proliferation. Previous attempts to correlate specific histological findings including cellular crescents or endocapillary proliferation, with clinical outcomes, have produced conflicting results.
METHODS
We conducted a prospective open-labelled trial of 12 patients with crescentic, proliferative IgA nephropathy and clinically progressive disease and treated them with pulse steroids and intravenous cyclophosphamide. Therapy included pulse solumedrol at 15 mg/kg/day for 3 days, followed by monthly intravenous cyclophosphamide at 0.5 g/m(2) body surface area for 6 months. Clinically significant proteinuria (>1.0 g/24 h) was present in all patients, while nephrotic-range proteinuria (>3.0 g/24 h) was observed in eight of 12 patients. All patients were hypertensive (BP >140/90 mmHg).
RESULTS
After 6 months of treatment, the mean serum creatinine was reduced from a maximum of 2.65+/-0.39 to 1.51+/-0.10 mg/dl (P<0.03), while proteinuria was reduced from 4.04 to 1.35 g/24 h (P<0.01). The mean slope of 1/serum creatinine increased from -0.0398+/-0.02 to 0.0076+/-0.01 after 6 months of therapy, but this trend did not reach statistical significance (P<0.08). A repeat kidney biopsy was performed in all treated patients. Endocapillary proliferation, cellular crescents and karyorrhexis were eliminated in all 12 patients after 6 months of therapy, while interstitial fibrosis and tubule dropout remained unchanged. To determine the long-term efficacy of the treatment, treated patients were compared to 12 historical controls matched for severity of IgA on initial biopsy. After 36 months, the rate of end-stage renal disease in the treated group was lower (1/12) than in the historical controls (5/12).
CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that steroids and intravenous cyclophosphamide reduce proliferative lesions, reduce proteinuria and stabilize renal function in patients with crescentic IgA nephropathy.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Bone and Mineral Metabolism
March/3/2008
Abstract
To characterize an experimental model of osteoporosis in rabbits induced either by ovariectomy (OVX), glucocorticoids, or by a combination of both. Thirty-five rabbits were randomly allocated into five groups: bilateral OVX, daily methylprednisolone hemisuccinate (MPH) injections at a 1.5 mg/kg/day dose for 4 consecutive weeks (MPH group), or variable dose of MPH between 0.5 and 2 mg/kg/day in combination with OVX (OVX + MPH at low, medium, and high dose). Twenty-two animals were killed 6 weeks after OVX, and 13 were killed 16 weeks later. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry was obtained at baseline and 6 and 16 weeks after OVX. High-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was carried out at 0 and 6 weeks after OVX. Glucose, total cholesterol, triglyceride, and oestradiol blood levels before and 16 weeks after OVX were determined. Bone mineral density (BMD) decreased significantly at lumbar spine in MPH and OVX + MPH medium-dose groups, and at global knee and subchondral bone of the knee in MPH, OVX + MPH low- and medium-dosage groups (P < 0.05). BMD variations in OVX rabbits were not significant in any of the three anatomical locations analyzed. BMD variation 16 weeks after OVX was significant at lumbar spine and global knee in the OVX + MPH medium-dose group and only at global knee in the OVX + MPH low-dose group (P < 0.05). MRI did not show bone or cartilage changes. Osteoporosis can be induced experimentally in rabbits through isolated MPH or by a combination of OVX and medium dose corticosteroid for 4 weeks. OVX alone was not sufficient to induce osteoporosis.
Publication
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
December/11/2005
Abstract
Inflammation plays a major pathological role in spinal cord injury (SCI). Although antiinflammatory treatment using the glucocorticoid methyprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS) improved outcomes in several multicenter clinical trials, additional clinical experience suggests that MPSS is only modestly beneficial in SCI and poses a risk for serious complications. Recent work has shown that erythropoietin (EPO) moderates CNS tissue injury, in part by reducing inflammation, limiting neuronal apoptosis, and restoring vascular autoregulation. We determined whether EPO and MPSS act synergistically in SCI. Using a rat model of contusive SCI, we compared the effects of EPO [500-5,000 units/kg of body weight (kg-bw)] with MPSS (30 mg/kg-bw) for proinflammatory cytokine production, histological damage, and motor function at 1 month after a compression injury. Although high-dose EPO and MPSS suppressed proinflammatory cytokines within the injured spinal cord, only EPO was associated with reduced microglial infiltration, attenuated scar formation, and sustained neurological improvement. Unexpectedly, coadministration of MPSS antagonized the protective effects of EPO, even though the EPO receptor was up-regulated normally after injury. These data illustrate that the suppression of proinflammatory cytokines alone does not necessarily prevent secondary injury and suggest that glucocorticoids should not be coadministered in clinical trials evaluating the use of EPO for treatment of SCI.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Pediatric Surgery
November/4/2003
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Early reports suggest that the use of steroids after Kasai portoenterostomy may improve bile flow and outcome in infants with biliary atresia.
METHODS
Of 28 infants with biliary atresia, half received adjuvant high-dose steroids, and half received standard therapy. Infants in the steroid group (n = 14) received intravenous solumedrol (taper of 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 mg/kg/d), followed by 8 to 12 weeks of prednisone (2 mg/kg/d). The steroid protocol also included ursodeoxycholic acid indefinitely and intravenous antibiotics for 8 to 12 weeks followed by oral antibiotic prophylaxis. Infants in the standard therapy group (n = 14) received no steroids, occasional ursodeoxycholic acid, and perioperative intravenous antibiotics followed by oral antibiotic prophylaxis. The infants were not assigned randomly, but rather received standard therapy or adjuvant steroid therapy according to individual surgeon preference.
RESULTS
Eleven of 14 (79%) in the steroid group and 3 of 14 (21%) in the standard therapy group had a conjugated bilirubin level less than 1.0 within 3 to 4 months of surgery (P <.001). Fewer patients in the steroid group (21% v 85%) required liver transplantation or died during the first year of life (P <.001). Infants in the steroid group did better despite the fact that this group included 5 infants with biliary atresia-polysplenia-heterotaxia syndrome, a subgroup that might have been expected to have a poor prognosis. Neither bile duct size nor liver histology was a reliable predictor of success or failure in either group.
CONCLUSIONS
Adjuvant therapy using high-dose steroids, ursodeoxycholic acid, and intravenous antibiotics may accelerate the clearance of jaundice and decrease the need for early liver transplantation after Kasai portoenterostomy.
Publication
Journal: Archives of ophthalmology (Chicago, Ill. : 1960)
December/17/1997
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
To assess the 5-year visual course, including the incidence of recurrent optic neuritis, in 454 patients enrolled in the Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial.
METHODS
Five-year follow-up vision testing, which included measures of visual acuity, contrast sensitivity, visual field, and color vision, was completed for 397 (87%) of the 454 patients.
RESULTS
Visual function test results in the eyes that experienced optic neuritis at study enrollment (affected eyes) were normal or only slightly abnormal after 5 years in most patients; the results did not significantly differ by treatment group (P=.37 for visual acuity). The visual acuity in the affected eyes was 20/25 or better in 87%, 20/25 to 20/40 in 7%, 20/50 to 20/190 in 3%, and 20/200 or worse in 3%. The recurrence of optic neuritis in either eye occurred in 28% of the patients and was more frequent in patients with multiple sclerosis (P=.001) and in patients without multiple sclerosis who were in the prednisone treatment group (P=.004). Most eyes with a recurrence retained normal or almost normal visual function.
CONCLUSIONS
Most patients retained good to excellent vision in the 5 years following an attack of optic neuritis, even if the optic neuritis recurred. Recurrences were more frequent in patients with multiple sclerosis and in those treated with oral prednisone alone. The completion of the 5-year follow-up by the Optic Neuritis Treatment Trial cohort has not altered our management recommendations based on the results we reported earlier.
Publication
Journal: Stem Cell Research and Therapy
July/10/2016
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Mesenchymal stem cells can potentially be used in therapy for spinal cord injury (SCI). Methylprednisolone sodium succinate (MPSS) has been used as a scavenging agent in acute SCI treatment, but its use no longer recommended. This study aimed to identify ways to reduce the usage and risk of high doses of glucocorticoid steroids, and determine whether AD-MSCs could be used as an early alternative treatment modality for acute SCI.
METHODS
Sixteen adult beagle dogs with SCI were assigned to four treatment groups: control, MPSS, AD-MSCs, and AD-MSCs + MPSS. Additionally, one dog was used to evaluate the distribution of AD-MSCs in the body after injection. AD-MSCs (1 × 10(7) cells) were injected intravenously once a day for 3 days beginning at 6 hours post-SCI. MPSS was also injected intravenously according to the standard protocol for acute SCI. A revised Tarlov scale was used to evaluate hindlimb functional recovery. The levels of markers for oxidative metabolism (3-nitrotyrosine, 4-hydroxynonenal, and protein carbonyl) and inflammation (cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-6, and tumor necrosis factor-α) were also measured.
RESULTS
At 7 days post-treatment, hindlimb movement had improved in the AD-MSCs and AD-MSCs + MPSS groups; however, subjects in the groups treated with MPSS exhibited gastrointestinal hemorrhages. Hematoxylin and eosin staining revealed fewer hemorrhages and lesser microglial infiltration in the AD-MSCs group. The green fluorescent protein-expressing AD-MSCs were clearly detected in the lung, spleen, and injured spinal cord; however, these cells were not detected in the liver and un-injured spinal cord. Levels of 3-nitrotyrosine were decreased in the MPSS and AD-MSCs + MPSS groups; 4-hydroxynenonal and cyclooxygenase-2 levels were decreased in all treatment groups; and interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-α, and phosphorylated-signal transducer and activator transcription 3 levels were decreased in the AD-MSCs and AD-MSCs + MPSS groups.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results suggest that early intravenous injection of AD-MSCs after acute SCI may prevent further damage through enhancement of antioxidative and anti-inflammatory mechanisms, without inducing adverse effects. Additionally, this treatment could also be used as an alternative intravenous treatment modality for acute SCI.
Publication
Journal: Archives of surgery (Chicago, Ill. : 1960)
April/4/2001
Abstract
OBJECTIVE
Preoperative administration of methylprednisolone sodium succinate can control surgical stress in patients undergoing hepatic resection.
METHODS
A prospective randomized trial.
METHODS
A university hospital department of surgery.
METHODS
Thirty-three patients who underwent hepatic resection were classified into 2 groups: a control group (n = 16) and a steroid group (n = 17) in which patients were intravenously administered 500 mg of methylprednisolone 2 hours before surgery.
METHODS
Perioperative levels of interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-10 (serum and peritoneal), immunosuppressive acidic protein, Candida antigen, and other laboratory and clinical variables were measured.
RESULTS
Postoperative levels of serum and peritoneal IL-6 and levels of C-reactive protein were significantly lower in the steroid group than in controls. Furthermore, serum and peritoneal IL-10 levels were significantly higher in the steroid group. The total bilirubin value on postoperative day 1 was significantly lower in the steroid group than in controls. Postoperative immunosuppressive acidic protein levels were also significantly lower in the steroid group, as was the positive rate of serum Candida antigen. No differences were found in the incidence of postoperative complications.
CONCLUSIONS
Preoperative steroid administration significantly elevated anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 levels, suppressed the levels of inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and C-reactive protein, and prevented postoperative elevation of total bilirubin values. Furthermore, postoperative elevation of immunosuppressive acidic protein levels and the positive rate of Candida antigen were suppressed, indicating that the immune response was maintained by preoperative steroid administration.
Publication
Journal: Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics
January/25/1990
Abstract
Pharmacodynamic models for "directly suppressive" effects of methylprednisolone are based on the premise that receptor interactions of steroids are followed by immediate suppression of either the circadian secretion of cortisol or the constant rate recirculation of histamine-containing basophils that persists until inhibitory concentrations of methylprednisolone disappear. Methylprednisolone doses of 0, 10, 20, and 40 mg were given as the 21-succinate sodium salt in a balanced crossover study to six normal men. Plasma steroid concentrations and blood histamine were measured simultaneously. Both forms of methylprednisolone exhibited linear kinetic parameters. One dynamic model quantitates the baseline circadian pattern and the decline and return of cortisol with similar parameter estimates for all three dose levels. A similar model describes the monoexponential decline and the log-linear return to steady-state baseline of blood histamine. Similar inhibitory concentration values for both effects approximated the equilibrium dissociation constant of in vitro steroid receptor binding. The new models are more physiologically appropriate for these steroid effects than three other models that are commonly employed in pharmacodynamics. Steroid effects generally appear to be receptor mediated with either nongene immediate responses or gene-mediated delayed effects. These models allow quantitation of the rapid effects of steroids with simple equations and common fitted parameters for all steroid dose levels.
Publication
Journal: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
September/23/2002
Abstract
BACKGROUND
Acute spinal cord injury is a devastating condition typically affecting young people with a preponderance being male. Steroid treatment in the early hours of the injury is aimed at reducing the extent of permanent paralysis during the rest of the patient's life.
OBJECTIVE
To review randomized trials of steroids for acute spinal cord injury.
METHODS
The review draws on the search strategy developed by the Cochrane Injuries Group. In addition, files of the National Acute Spinal Cord Injury Study have been reviewed and a Medline search conducted.
METHODS
All published or unpublished randomized controlled trials of steroid treatment for acute spinal cord injury in any language.
METHODS
Data have been abstracted from original trial reports. For the NASCIS, Japanese and French trials, additional data (e.g. SDs) have been obtained from the original authors.
RESULTS
There are few trials in this area of medical care. Only one steroid has been extensively studied, methylprednisolone sodium succinate, which has been shown to improve neurologic outcome up to one year post injury if administered within eight hours of injury and in a dose regimen of: bolus 30mg/kg administered over 15 minutes with a maintenance infusion of 5.4 mg/kg per hour infused for 23 hours. The initial North American trial was replicated in a Japanese trial but not in the one from France. Data has been obtained from the latter studies to permit appropriate meta-analysis of all three trials. This analysis indicates significant recovery in motor function after methylprednisolone therapy when administration commences within eight hours of injury. A more recent trial indicates that if methylprednisolone therapy is given for an additional 24 hours (for a total of 48 hours), additional improvement in motor neurologic function and functional status is observed. This is particularly observed if treatment cannot be started until between three to eight hours after injury. The same methylprednisolone therapy has been found effective in whiplash injuries and a modified regimen found to improve recovery after surgery for lumbar disc disease.
CONCLUSIONS
High dose methylprednisolone steroid therapy is the only pharmacological therapy shown to have efficacy in a Phase Three randomized trial when it can be administered within eight hours of injury. A recent trial indicates additional benefit by extending the maintenance dose from 24 to 48 hours if start of treatment must be delayed to between three and eight hours after injury. There is an urgent need for more randomized trials of pharmacological therapy for acute spinal cord injury.
Publication
Journal: Journal of Clinical Investigation
March/23/1981
Abstract
Therapeutic doses of corticosteroids frequently induce eosinopenia; however, the mechanism(s) involved remain obscure. To investigate this question, we studied the effects of corticosteroids on eosinophil adherence and migration. Eosinophils from normal donors were prepared by dextran sedimentation and Hypaque gradient centrifugation to 45-96% purity. Adherence was measured by filtration of whole blood and isolated eosinophils through nylon wool columns. Before prednisone administration, adherence was 83.8+/-3.2% for eosinophils in heparinized blood and 82.1+/-3.2% for isolated eosinophils. 4 h after oral prednisone administration whole blood eosinophil adherence was reduced to 53.9+/-10.7%; at 24 and 48 h adherence was normal. In contrast, isolated eosinophils showed no decrease in adherence 4, 24, or 48 h after corticosteroid administration. Similarly, in vitro addition of hydrocortisone to isolated eosinophils at 0.01 and 2.0 mg/ml did not reduce adherence. Eosinophil migration was tested in modified Boyden chambers by "lower-surface" and "leading-front" methods, using zymosan-activated serum and buffered saline to assess chemotactic and random migration, respectively. In vitro incubation of eosinophils with hydrocortisone or methylprednisolone produced a dose-dependent inhibition of chemotaxis. Using lower-surface methods the minimal concentration effecting substantial inhibition was 0.01 mg/ml for both drugs. At 2.0 mg/ml hydrocortisone and methylprednisolone inhibited eosinophil chemotaxis 82.6+/-4.4% and 85.0+/-3.5%, respectively. Using leading-front chemotaxis techniques significant inhibition was detected at 0.001 mg/ml hydrocortisone. Eosinophils incubated and washed free of corticosteroids responded normally to chemoattractants, indicating that the inhibitory effect of these drugs was reversible. Hydrocortisone at 2 mg/ml inhibited random eosinophil migration, although this effect was not apparent at lower concentrations. Corticosteroids did not act as chemotactic factor inactivators and were not toxic as measured by trypan blue exclusion. Eosinophils obtained from donors who had received 40 mg of prednisone orally for four days showed normal chemotactic responses, probably reflecting the fact that the cells were washed free of plasma before testing. In contrast, incubation of eosinophils in plasma from donors who had received a 300-mg bolus of hydrocortisone induced 46.1+/-4.5% more inhibition of chemotaxis than did incubation in normal plasma. These results indicate that: (a) eosinophil adherence is transiently reduced following in vivo corticosteroid administration, (b) eosinophil chemotaxis is inhibited by both in vitro and in vivo administration of corticosteroids, and (c) the chemotaxis inhibiting effect is nontoxic, cell-directed, dose-dependent and reversible. Inhibition of eosinophil adherence and chemotaxis may in part explain how corticosteroids produce eosinopenia and decrease the local accumulation of eosinophils.
Publication
Journal: The Lancet
September/9/1982
Abstract
To confirm the findings of uncontrolled trials that methylprednisolone pulse therapy (MPPT) is a safe treatment for active rheumatoid disease, a double-blind trial was conducted in which 20 patients with active rheumatoid disease were randomly allocated to receive an infusion of either 1 g methylprednisolone or placebo. Methylprednisolone produced significant improvement in all clinical variables measured, a benefit which was sustained for at least 6 weeks. The placebo produced only transient improvement in some of the clinical variables measured. when the 10 placebo groups patients were later given an infusion of 1 g methylprednisolone, they too showed significant clinical benefit. The methylprednisolone also gave rise to improvements in some haematological and biochemical variables.
Publication
Journal: Annals of Surgery
July/14/1983
Abstract
The most important concept emerging from the management of complex hepatic trauma is that direct suture ligation of severed blood vessels and bile ducts is the most effective treatment. Three essential maneuvers are necessary: (1) the use of the finger fracture technique to expose the laceration widely, so that individual ligation of severed blood vessels and bile ducts can be accomplished under direct vision; (2) occluding the portal triad for 20 to 60 minutes; (3) closure of the hepatic incision over a viable omental pedicle. Two hundred consecutive patients with hepatic injuries were treated at the Trauma and Shock Unit of Bellevue Hospital between July 1976 and January 1982. One hundred and twenty-five injuries (63%) could be managed by superficial suture and drainage alone; 75 (37%) more extensive injuries required additional therapy; 47 of the 75 injuries required inflow occlusion for periods of up to 60 minutes, with the mean occlusion time of 30 minutes. All patients were pretreated with 30 to 40 mg/kg of Solu-Medrol prior to cross-clamping the portal triad. In addition, the liver was cooled to 27-32 degrees C topically by pouring 1 liter of iced Ringer's lactate directly on the liver surface, monitoring the temperature with an intra-hepatic probe. Ischemia time exceeded 20 minutes in 70%, 30 minutes in 40% and 60 minutes in 7% of patients. This approach, with complex hepatic trauma, has been dramatically effective. There were only four deaths (5.3%). One (1.3%) patient required reoperation for bleeding; three patients (4%) developed perihepatic abscesses; and two patients (3%) developed biliary fistulae that spontaneously closed. An extended right hepatectomy was necessary in the one patient who required reoperation for bleeding. This represents the only case of a formal hepatic resection in this series. Hepatic artery ligation was not employed in any case. These experiences strongly endorse the direct approach to the treatment of major hepatic lacerations by opening a lacerated liver sufficiently to ligate lacerated blood vessels and bile ducts, followed by closure over an omental pedicle. The wide-spread adoption of this technique will probably lower the mortality from massive liver injuries to 5-10%.
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