Free oxygen radical-induced acute pancreatitis. A light and electron microscopic study
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2003
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Background/Aims: To date direct toxic effects of free oxygen radicals in vivo on pancreatic parenchyma have not been studied thoroughly. We aimed to study: 1) the detailed histopathological changes induced by free oxygen radicals in pancreas; and 2) the preventive effect of intraductal catalase in H2O2-induced acute pancreatitis. Methodology: Wistar Albino rats were randomized into six groups. 1) First experiment: Bile-pancreatic duct was cannulated close to the liver and perfused through the duodenum with (i) normal saline solution, (ii) iron sulfate (FeSO4), (iii) hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), (iv) hydrogen peroxide and iron sulfate simultaneously. 2) Second experiment: Bile pancreatic duct was perfused either with H2O2 or H2O2+catalase. Serum amylase and pancreas malondialdehyde levels were measured in both experiments after 3 hours of perfusion period. Tissue samples were obtained for histopathological examinations. Results: 1) First experiment: Intraductal perfusion of FeSO4 or H2O2 or H2O2+FeSO4 induced acute edematous pancreatitis with focal parenchymal necrosis. At the ultrastructural level, intracytoplasmic formation of vacuoles, fusion of the vacuoles and zymogen granules, and autophagosomes containing cellular organelles were found. Serum amylase and pancreas malondialdehyde levels, and morphological score were significantly higher in these groups than control group (p<0.001). 2) Second experiment: Catalase perfusion simultaneously with H2O2 decreased the serum amylase and pancreas malondialdehyde levels, and morphological score significantly (p<0.001) and prevented the desquamation of the columnar epithelium and development of gross edema but not parenchymal necrosis. Conclusions: Intraductal perfusion of FeSO4 or H2O2 or H2O2+FeSO4-induced acute pancreatitis with marked light and electronmicroscopic changes. Intraductal perfusion of catalase and H2O2 simultaneously did not prevent or lessen the parenchymal necrosis. These findings have suggested that another mechanism of injury may also play a role in parenchymal injury in oxygen radical-induced acute pancreatitis.
Description
Keywords
Acute Disease , Animals , Catalase , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Free Radicals , Male , Microscopy , Microscopy, Electron , Pancreas , Pancreatitis , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Reactive Oxygen Species , amylase , catalase , ferrous sulfate , free radical , hydrogen peroxide , malonaldehyde , oxygen radical , sodium chloride , zymogen granule , acute pancreatitis , amino acid blood level , amylase blood level , animal cell , animal experiment , animal model , animal tissue , article , bile duct , cell organelle , cell structure , cell vacuole , columnar epithelium , controlled study , desquamation , duodenum , edema , electron microscopy , female , histopathology , in vivo study , male , microscopy , nonhuman , pancreas duct , pancreas necrosis , pathogenesis , phagosome , priority journal , rat , scoring system , ultrastructure