“…1,2 The mortality rates from II/RI are very high and reach more than 60% and it often requires clinical operation to cut off the necrotic intestinal segment. 3,4 It causes the tissue injury through inadequate blood and oxygen supply relative to cellular energy stores exhaustion, tissue metabolic disorder, and toxic metabolites accumulation in intestinal ischemia phase and leads to reactive oxygen species (ROS), inflammatory factors, calcium overload, and so on, mediating the further damage of intestine in reperfusion phase. 5 It is well known that oxygen supply reestablishment results in ROS production, causing lipid oxidation reaction in cell membranes, 6 and blood supply reestablishment leads to production of a lot of inflammatory factors to aggravate tissue injury and intestinal barrier dysfunction, and toxic metabolite products enter the systemic blood circulation and threaten life.…”