Lipopolysaccharide (LPS, endotoxin) administration to human subjects elicits significant elevations in plasma cachectin/TNF, epinephrine, and cortisol. This study examined the temporal relationship between changes in blood leukocyte subsets and plasma mediators following endotoxin administration to normal human subjects. A five-minute intravenous infusion of purified LPS (20 units/kg Escherichia coli) was administered to 12 healthy volunteers. Blood samples were obtained at varying intervals after infusion and analyzed for differential cell counts and lymphocyte subsets (CD2, CD3, CD4, CD8, CD20, and HLA-DR) by flow microfluorimetry, and also assayed for plasma cachectin/TNF, epinephrine, and cortisol. Plasma cachectin/TNF was significantly elevated at 75 and 90 minutes after infusion with a peak concentration of 261 +/- 115 pg/ml noted 75 minutes after infusion. A significant plasma epinephrine elevation of 181 +/- 75 pg/ml was demonstrated one hour after infusion, while significant elevations in plasma cortisol were noted from one to five hours after infusion with a peak level of 34 +/- 3 micrograms/dl three hours after infusion. A profound monocytopenia (p less than 0.01) was noted one hour after infusion. Temporally associated with the rise in plasma cortisol was a reversal of the early granulocytopenia to a significant granulocytosis (p less than 0.01 versus preinfusion mean), whereas a marked lymphocytopenia (p less than 0.01) was observed from one to six hours after infusion. During the period of hypercortisolemia, CD2, CD3, and CD4 lymphocyte percentages were decreased (p less than 0.01) while CD20 and HLA-DR lymphocyte percentages were increased (p less than 0.01). There was a small percentage decrease in CD8 lymphocytes from one to 24 hours after infusion (p less than 0.01), although relative to the one-hour nadir, there was a significant rise in the percentage during the time of elevated plasma cortisol concentrations. A six-hour infusion of epinephrine (30 ng/kg/min) administered to six healthy volunteers resulted in a monocytosis (p less than 0.05) and granulocytosis (p less than 0.01) without a change in lymphocyte number or lymphocyte subset percentage. Previous reports have shown that in vivo corticosteroid infusion causes a prominent granulocytosis, monocytopenia, and lymphocytopenia with a decrease in the percentages of CD3 and CD4 lymphocytes. The peripheral blood leukocyte dynamics documented in the current study are similar to patterns observed following in vivo corticosteroid administration. This study suggests that the acute adrenocortical response to endotoxemia primarily mediates the subsequent changes in leukocyte subsets.
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