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Inflammatory response in preterm infants is induced early in life by oxygen and modulated by total parenteral nutrition.

Authors :
Lavoie PM
Lavoie JC
Watson C
Rouleau T
Chang BA
Chessex P
Source :
Pediatric research [Pediatr Res] 2010 Sep; Vol. 68 (3), pp. 248-51.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

The i.v. lipid emulsion (LIP) is a source of oxidants, which may stimulate inflammation. Coadministration of parenteral multivitamins (MVP) with LIP prevents lipid peroxidation in light-exposed total parenteral nutrition (TPN). We hypothesized that this modality of TPN administration affects systemic inflammation, which may be modulated by exposure to oxygen. Premature infants were allocated to three TPN regimens: control regimen - MVP coadministered with amino acid/dextrose exposed to ambient light, LIP provided separately (n = 9) - LIP+MVP light exposed (LE): MVP coadministered with light-exposed LIP (n = 9) - LIP+MVP light protected (LP): MVP coadministered with light-protected LIP (n = 8). In LE and LP, amino acid/dextrose was provided separately. On reaching full TPN, infants were sampled for IL-6 and IL-8 in plasma and the redox potential of glutathione in whole blood (E, mV). Data were compared (ANOVA) in infants exposed to low (<0.25) versus high (> or =0.25) FiO2. Patients (mean +/- SD: birth weight 797 +/- 172 g; GA 26 +/- 1 wk) had similar clinical characteristics in TPN groups. Cytokine levels correlated positively (p < 0.01) with FiO2 and E. High FiO2 stimulated an increase (p < 0.01) in cytokines in control regimen, whereas these markers remained unaffected by oxygen in the LE and LP groups. The choice of a TPN admixture may have important consequences on the systemic inflammatory response triggered by an oxidant stress.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1530-0447
Volume :
68
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Pediatric research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
20703144
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-201011001-00485