4.6 Article

Blunting the response to endotoxin in healthy subjects: effects of various doses of intravenous fish oil

Journal

INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
Volume 36, Issue 2, Pages 289-295

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-009-1689-8

Keywords

Inflammation; Sepsis; PUFA; Downregulation

Funding

  1. Swiss National Science Foundation [32-61582.00]
  2. Fresenius Kabi AG (Bad Homburg, Germany)

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To test the dose response effect of infused fish oil (FO) rich in n-3 PUFAs on the inflammatory response to endotoxin (LPS) and on membrane incorporation of fatty acids in healthy subjects. Prospective, sequential investigation comparing three different FO doses. Three groups of male subjects aged 26.8 +/- A 3.2 years (BMI 22.5 +/- A 2.1). One of three FO doses (Omegaven(A (R))10%) as a slow infusion before LPS: 0.5 g/kg 1 day before LPS, 0.2 g/kg 1 day before, or 0.2 g/kg 2 h before. Temperature, hemodynamic variables, indirect calorimetry and blood samples (TNF-alpha, stress hormones) were collected. After LPS temperature, ACTH and TNF-alpha concentrations increased in the three groups: the responses were significantly blunted (p < 0.0001) compared with the control group of the Pluess et al. trial. Cortisol was unchanged. Lowest plasma ACTH, TNF-alpha and temperature AUC values were observed after a single 0.2 g/kg dose of FO. EPA incorporation into platelet membranes was dose-dependent. Having previously shown that the response to LPS was reproducible, this study shows that three FO doses blunted it to various degrees. The 0.2 g/kg perfusion immediately before LPS was the most efficient in blunting the responses, suggesting LPS capture in addition to the systemic and membrane effects.

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