Investigation of fingolimod-induced lymphocyte sequestration on inflammatory response and neurological damages after cardiac arrest

Intensive Care Medicine Experimental(2024)

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Abstract
A sepsis-like syndrome is known to occur after cardiac arrest, leading to cerebral infiltration by white blood cells (WBC). We hypothesized that pharmacological sequestration of WBC, and more specifically lymphocytes within lymphoid tissues, could reduce the cerebral infiltration by these inflammatory cells and subsequent acute brain injury in a porcine model of cardiac arrest. Lymphocyte sequestration was induced by the sphingosine-1 phosphate receptors agonist fingolimod. In a first set of experiments, anesthetized pigs underwent a sham instrumentation with no cardiac arrest (n = 4). They received an administration of fingolimod (1 mg/kg, i.v.) in order to confirm its effect on WBC. In a second set of experiments, animals randomly received fingolimod or saline two hours prior to an episode of ventricular fibrillation (14 min) with subsequent resuscitation (n = 6 in each group). Neurological injury was assessed 24 h after resuscitation. In the first set of experiments, WBC and blood lymphocyte counts were significantly reduced by − 61 ± 10
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Key words
Cardiac arrest,Resuscitation,Lymphocyte,Sepsis-like,Inflammation,Neurological dysfunction
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