Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Inflammatory responses to acute carbon monoxide poisoning and the role of plasma gelsolin.
- Journal:
- Science advances
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Arya, Awadhesh K et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Emergency Medicine · United States
Abstract
The mechanism for neurological deficits from carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning is unclear. In a series of 150 patients with CO poisoning, we found marked elevations of blood-borne inflammatory filamentous (F-) actin-coated microparticles (MPs), neutrophil activation, and a 90% reduction in the normal level of plasma gelsolin (pGSN), a protein capable of lysing F-actin-coated MPs. This led to studies in a murine model where the same events occur and cause neuroinflammation with cognitive dysfunction. All events are recapitulated when F-actin MPs are injected intravenously, which establishes a blood-to-brain-to-blood inflammatory cycle that persists for weeks. All changes, including cognitive dysfunction, can be abrogated by an injection of human recombinant pGSN within 2 weeks after CO poisoning. These findings demonstrate that CO-induced neurological injury has an inflammatory etiology. Because of MP-mediated communications between the brain and systemic circulation, CO-induced cognitive deficits may be reversible with a pharmaceutical intervention.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39919185/