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Bacterial translocation to mesenteric lymph nodes is increased in cirrhotic rats with ascites
Authors:Guadalupe Garcia-Tsao   Fa-Yauh Lee  Gertrude E. Barden  Richard Cartun  A. Brian West
Affiliation:Hepatic Hemodynamic Laboratory, West Haven Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, USA;Pathology and Clinical Laboratory Service, West Haven Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, USA;Department of Medicine, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA;§Liver Center and Digestive Diseases Section, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA;#Department of Pathology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, USA;Department of Pathology, Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Connecticut, USA
Abstract:View the MathML source Cirrhotic patients are predisposed to develop spontaneous bacteremias and/or peritonitis, mainly caused by enteric bacteria. The aim of this study was to investigate if bacterial translocation, which is the passage of bacteria from the intestinal lumen to regional lymph nodes and/or the systemic circulation, is increased in a rat model of cirrhosis. View the MathML source Rats were studied after 12–16 weeks of CCl4 inhalation, when samples of mesenteric lymph nodes, blood, liver, and spleen for standard bacteriologic cultures and a fragment of colon and liver for histology were obtained. Immunostaining of the cecum was performed using a polyclonal anti-Escherichia coli antibody. View the MathML source A significantly greater proportion of rats with cirrhosis and ascites (5 of 9; 56%) had positive mesenteric lymph node cultures compared with cirrhotics without ascites (0 of 9) and normal controls (0 of 12) (P < 0.01). In one cirrhotic rat, E. coli was isolated from both mesenteric lymph nodes and ascites. Rats with cirrhosis and ascites had significantly greater cecal submucosal edema and inflammation than rats with no ascites and controls. Immunoreactivity with E. coli was present in the cecal wall in 3 of 5 animals with E. coli translocation to mesenteric lymph nodes. View the MathML source In cirrhotic rats, bacterial translocation is increased after the development of ascites and may be a major factor in the development of spontaneous infections in cirrhosis.
Keywords:Abbreviations: MLN   mesenteric lymph node
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