Nitric oxide: the Jekyll and Hyde of gut inflammation.
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Abstrak
We studied the effects of seven day treatment with the nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor NG-nitro-L-arginine (L-NAME), administered in the drinking water (100 micrograms/ml ad lib) of female guinea pigs. The effects of NOS inhibition were evaluated in naive animals and in guinea pigs with ileitis induced by intraluminal trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS). After 7 days, animals were anesthetized, a sterile saline lavage injected into an ileal loop and removed after 30 min for analysis. In naive guinea pigs, L-NAME caused a marked increase in ileal myeloperoxidase activity and conversion of the mucosa from an absorptive to a secretory state. TNBS-treated guinea pigs has a similar, marked increase in granulocyte infiltration and a mucosal secretory response. However, in contrast to naive animals, L-NAME treatment was anti-inflammatory, reverting all responses to the basal state. We conclude that intestinal nitric oxide serves an anti-inflammatory role under basal conditions, whereas in the TNBS model of chronic ileitis, nitric oxide is a critical mediator of gut injury.