Thromb Haemost 2005; 94(05): 1054-1059
DOI: 10.1160/TH05-05-0330
Wound Healing and Inflammation/Infection
Schattauer GmbH

Modulation of the intestinal response to ionizing radiation by anticoagulant and non-anticoagulant heparins

Junru Wang
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
,
Huaien Zheng
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
,
Xiaohua Qiu
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
,
Ashwini Kulkarni
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
,
Louis M. Fink
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
2   Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
,
Martin Hauer-Jensen
1   University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
2   Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, Little Rock, Arizona, USA
› Author Affiliations
Financial support: National Institutes of Health (CA71382)
Further Information

Publication History

Received: 12 May 2005

Accepted after resubmission: 02 August 2005

Publication Date:
14 December 2017 (online)

Summary

Endothelial dysfunction is involved in radiation responses in many normal tissues, including intestine. Endothelium-directed interventions ameliorate intestinal radiation injury (radiation enteropathy) in animal models, and anecdotal reports also suggest a beneficial effect of heparin. This study assessed low molecular weight heparin as an intestinal radiation response modifier. Rats underwent localized small bowel irradiation. Groups of rats were treated with saline, nadroparin (3 mg/kg/d), or a nonanticoagulant heparin (SR80258, 3 mg/kg/d), from 3 days before to 2 weeks after irradiation. The intestinal radiation response was assessed 2 weeks and 6 weeks after irradiation using quantitative histology; morphometry, and cellular and molecular endpoints. Compared to vehicle-treated controls, nadroparin sig-nificantly exacerbated structural radiation injury, neutrophil infiltration, and TGFβ and collagen I immunoreactivity levels 2 weeks after irradiation. SR80258 was associated with increased TGFβ levels, but the other parameters did not reach statistical significance. At 6 weeks, structural, cellular, and molecular injury was similar in the three experimental groups. Heparin, in contrast to antiplatelet agents and direct thrombin inhibitors, does not ameliorate, but exacerbates acute intestinal radiation toxicity. These data underscore the importance of heparin as an inhibitor of physiological anti-inflammatory mechanisms during tissue injury, as well as the non-anticoagulant effects of heparin. Moreover, these data may have implications for the use of heparin during radiation therapy.

 
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