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      Effect of aminophenols (5-ASA and 4-ASA) on colonic interleukin-1 generation.

      1 , , ,
      Gut

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          Abstract

          The effect of 5-ASA and 4-ASA, drugs used for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease, on modulation of experimental colitis and on colonic generation of interleukin-1 was evaluated. Three weeks of treatment with 5-ASA or 4-ASA (50 micrograms/kg) and one week of treatment with 5-ASA significantly decreased colonic interleukin-1 generation and the extent and severity of inflammation in a rat model of colitis induced by trinitrobenzene sulphonic acid. Colonic biopsies were obtained from patients with active ulcerative colitis and organ cultured 24 hours in the absence or presence of the following drugs: sulphasalazine, sulphapyridine, 5-ASA and 4-ASA (25-100 micrograms/ml). Interleukin-1 content in tissue cultured in the presence of 5-ASA (100 micrograms/ml) was two-thirds of its content in tissue cultured in drug free medium and its release into the medium was decreased by 50%. Sulphasalazine 50 micrograms/ml significantly decreased by 33% the tissue content but did not affect interleukin-1 release and a higher dose was not more effective. Sulphapyridine and 4-ASA in doses up to 100 micrograms/ml did not affect either interleukin-1 colonic content or its release into the culture medium. We conclude that pharmacological suppression of colonic interleukin-1 generation may be one, although not the sole mechanism to explain the therapeutic efficacy of 5-ASA in the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Gut
          Gut
          0017-5749
          0017-5749
          Jul 1992
          : 33
          : 7
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Medicine, Hadassah University Hospital Mount Scopus, Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
          Article
          10.1136/gut.33.7.929
          1379406
          1353743
          650b2fd5-6434-477b-9cfd-65ac63d56152
          History

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