%0 Journal Article %T Impact of oral simvastatin therapy on acute lung injury in mice during pneumococcal pneumonia %A Angela R Boyd %A Cecilia Hinojosa %A Perla J Rodriguez %A Carlos J Orihuela %J BMC Microbiology %D 2012 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1471-2180-12-73 %X Mice receiving HSD had reduced lung consolidation characterized by less macrophage and neutrophil infiltration and a significant reduction in the chemokines MCP-1 (P£¿=£¿0.03) and KC (P£¿=£¿0.02) and ICAM-1 in the lungs compared to control mice. HSD mice also had significantly lower bacterial titers in the blood at 36 (P£¿=£¿0.007) and 42 (P£¿=£¿0.03) hours post-infection versus controls. LSD had a more modest effect against S. pneumoniae but also resulted in reduced bacterial titers in the lungs and blood of mice after 42 h and a reduced number of infiltrated neutrophils. Neither LSD nor HSD mice had reduced mortality in a pneumonia model where mice received ampicillin 48 h after challenge.Prolonged oral simvastatin therapy had a strong dose-dependent effect on protection against S. pneumoniae as evidenced by reduced neutrophil infiltration, maintenance of vascular integrity, and lowered chemokine production in the lungs of mice on HSD. Statin therapy also protected through reduced bacterial burden in the lungs. Despite these protective correlates, mortality in the simvastatin-receiving cohorts was equivalent to controls. Thus, oral simvastatin at physiologically relevant doses only modestly protects against pneumococcal pneumonia. %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/12/73/abstract