A total of 120 Limulus amoebocyte lysate (LAL) determinations were made on plasma obtained from normal, healthy human blood donors. Results demonstrated a mean endotoxin level in blood of 0.02 to 1.57 pg/ml. The amount of Escherichia coli endotoxin added to human plasma samples can be quantitated by both nephelometry and turbidimetry. Endotoxin-spiked samples were shown to be significantly different from unspiked samples. When plasma samples were collected from 45 patients hospitalized at three centers, a strong association was demonstrated between a positive Limulus amoebocyte lysate assay and a septic condition.
Endotoxins represent a family of ubiquitous bacterial lipopolysaccharides found in water and raw materials. These substances have the ability to generate interleukin-1 (IL-1) and induce fever, as well as other acute phase phenomena. A study was undertaken to determine levels of background endotoxin in (1) continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis solution, (2) spent dialysate subsequent to overnight dwell, (3) hemodialysis solution, and (4) Limulus amebocyte lysate-reactive material (LAL-RM) in hemodialyzers and patient plasma. Levels of endotoxin in all of the above cases were less than thought to be required to induce biological activity, such as pyrogenicity, through IL-1 generation. Although nanogram amounts of LAL-RM are associated with some hollow-fiber membranes as well as the plasma of patients on those membranes, this material per se does not appear to produce IL-1 in vitro.
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