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Azithromycin in Combination with Ceftriaxone Reduces Systemic Inflammation and Provides Survival Benefit in a Murine Model of Polymicrobial Sepsis
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- American Society for Microbiology, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Sepsis is a life-threatening systemic inflammatory condition triggered as a result of an excessive host immune response to infection. In the past, immunomodulators have demonstrated a protective effect in sepsis. Azithromycin (a macrolide antibiotic) has immunomodulatory activity and was therefore evaluated in combination with ceftriaxone in a clinically relevant murine model of sepsis induced by cecal ligation and puncture (CLP). First, mice underwent CLP and 3 h later were administered the vehicle or a subprotective dose of ceftriaxone (100 mg/kg of body weight subcutaneously) alone or in combination with an immunomodulatory dose of azithromycin (100 mg/kg intraperitoneally). Survival was monitored for 5 days. In order to assess the immunomodulatory activity, parameters such as plasma and lung cytokine (interleukin-6 [IL-6], IL-1β, tumor necrosis factor alpha) concentrations, the plasma glutathione (GSH) concentration, plasma and lung myeloperoxidase (MPO) concentrations, body temperature, blood glucose concentration, and total white blood cell count, along with the bacterial load in blood, peritoneal lavage fluid, and lung homogenate, were measured 18 h after CLP challenge. Azithromycin in the presence of ceftriaxone significantly improved the survival of CLP-challenged mice. Further, the combination attenuated the elevated levels of inflammatory cytokines and MPO in plasma and lung tissue and increased the body temperature and blood glucose and GSH concentrations, which were otherwise markedly decreased in CLP-challenged mice. Ceftriaxone produced a significant reduction in the bacterial load, while coadministration of azithromycin did not produce a further reduction. Therefore, the survival benefit offered by azithromycin was due to immunomodulation and not its antibacterial action. The findings of this study indicate that azithromycin, in conjunction with appropriate antibacterial agents, could provide clinical benefits in sepsis.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Lipopolysaccharides
medicine.medical_treatment
030106 microbiology
Interleukin-1beta
Pharmacology
Azithromycin
Systemic inflammation
Proinflammatory cytokine
Sepsis
03 medical and health sciences
Mice
medicine
Escherichia coli
Animals
Pharmacology (medical)
Lung
Escherichia coli Infections
Inflammation
biology
business.industry
Interleukin-6
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
Ceftriaxone
medicine.disease
Glutathione
Bacterial Load
Disease Models, Animal
030104 developmental biology
Infectious Diseases
Cytokine
Myeloperoxidase
biology.protein
Tumor necrosis factor alpha
Drug Therapy, Combination
Female
medicine.symptom
business
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0d545175129594fbe6d1c13c13ec392c