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Effects of hydrogen-rich saline in neuroinflammation and mitochondrial dysfunction in rat model of sepsis-associated encephalopathy.

敗血症関連脳症ラットモデルにおける水素富化生理食塩水の神経炎症およびミトコンドリア機能障害への影響

animal study injection / infusion positive

Abstract

Sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE) is a form of organ dysfunction lacking overt central nervous system infection, carrying substantial mortality and long-term neurological consequences. Using a juvenile rat model in which sepsis was induced by intraperitoneal lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 8 mg/kg), hydrogen-rich saline (HRS, 5 ml/kg) was administered 1 hour post-induction. At 48 hours, HRS-treated animals showed improved survival and reduced neuronal injury on Nissl staining. ELISA revealed lower TNF-α and IL-1β alongside elevated IL-10. TUNEL assay demonstrated fewer apoptotic cells, and immunohistochemistry showed diminished GFAP and IBA-1 immunoreactivity, indicating suppressed astrocyte and microglial activation. Mitochondrial membrane potential (JC-1) and ATP content, both reduced by LPS, were restored by HRS, while LPS-elevated ROS levels declined. Transmission electron microscopy confirmed increased mitochondrial and synaptic counts and improved ultrastructural integrity in HRS-treated rats. Collectively, these findings indicate that HRS mitigates neuroinflammation, glial activation, apoptosis, and mitochondrial dysfunction in juvenile SAE.

Mechanism

HRS suppresses neuroinflammation by reducing TNF-α and IL-1β while elevating IL-10, and protects mitochondrial function by restoring membrane potential and ATP production while decreasing ROS generation, thereby limiting apoptosis and glial activation.

Bibliographic

Authors
Dumbuya JS, Li SC, Liang L, Chen Y, Du J, Zeng Q
Journal
J Transl Med
Year
2022 (2022-11-26)
PMID
36435787
DOI
10.1186/s12967-022-03746-4
PMC
PMC9701391

Tags

Disease:敗血症 Delivery:点滴投与 Mechanism:アポトーシス抑制 炎症抑制 ミトコンドリア 酸化ストレス 活性酸素種

Delivery context

Intravenous hydrogen-saline infusion is a clinic-only route and is not viable for everyday self-administration. For routine hydrogen intake, inhalation is the most practical route, but inhalation carries explosion risk and concentration matters (empirical LFL of 10%; high-concentration 66% / 100% devices are not recommended).

Safety notes

Intravenous hydrogen-saline infusion is a clinic-only route and is not viable for everyday self-administration. For routine hydrogen intake, inhalation is the most practical route, but inhalation carries explosion risk and concentration matters (empirical LFL of 10%; high-concentration 66% / 100% devices are not recommended).

See also:

Other papers on the same disease / condition

Cite as: H2 Papers — PMID 36435787. https://h2-papers.org/en/papers/36435787
Source: PubMed PMID 36435787