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Administration of albumin to patients with sepsis syndrome: a possible beneficial role in plasma thi |
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Administration of albumin to
patients with sepsis syndrome: a possible beneficial role in plasma thiol
repletion.
Quinlan GJ, Margarson MP, Mumby
S, Evans TW, Gutteridge JM.
Clin Sci (Colch) 1998
Oct;95(4):459-65
1.Albumin is often administered intravenously to
critically ill patients as a volume expander, to combat hypoalbuminaemia, and to
decrease hyperbilirubinaemia. There is, however, an ongoing debate concerning
the therapeutic benefit of the former which is an expensive form of
treatment.2.Albumin has several biological functions, in particular as a ligand
binder. It also acts as an extracellular transition metal ion-binding and
radical-scavenging antioxidant. These functions are influenced by the presence
of an exposed thiol group (cys 34) on the surface of the albumin molecule. 3.The
ability of infused albumin to influence the plasma thiol pool, and hence
antioxidant potential, was investigated in patients with sepsis
syndrome.4.Plasma thiol levels rose rapidly after albumin infusion and remained
elevated even after plasma albumin levels had declined significantly, due to
interstitial leakage. Data are suggestive of some form of thiol exchange in the
plasma of these patients between albumin and molecules containing oxidized thiol
groups.5.Administration of albumin to patients with sepsis syndrome leads to a
sustained increase in plasma thiols. Thiols have several important antioxidant
functions, and thiol repletion in these patients, who are known to suffer from
oxidative stress, may have beneficial antioxidant effects. Antioxidant repletion
may represent an important facet of clinically administered albumin.
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