THE PREDICTIVE ROLE OF DELAYED-HYPERSENSITIVITY IN PREOPERATIVE PATIENTS
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 152 (3) , 297-301
Abstract
Surgical patients (727) who were skin tested with recall antigens prior to operation were analyzed. The analysis included preoperative diagnosis, operative intervention, postoperative septic complications and death. The normal skin test responders were of similar age and had equal degrees of surgical procedure performed compared with patients who were anergic. Preoperatively, polymorphonuclear neutrophil chemotaxis was abnormal in the majority of anergic patients, as was the serum albumin concentration. Postoperatively, sepsis, mortality and death due to sepsis were significantly higher in the anergic population, reconfirming the hypothesis that skin test anergy in patients preoperatively is a signal of increased risk for septic complications and death in such patients.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neutrophil function in surgical patients: Two inhibitors of granulocyte chemotaxis associated with sepsisJournal of Surgical Research, 1979
- COMPARISON OF IMMUNOLOGICAL PROFILES AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON BACTEREMIA IN SURGICAL PATIENTS WITH A HIGH-RISK OF INFECTION1979
- DELAYED-HYPERSENSITIVITY RESPONSE - APPLICATION IN CLINICAL SURGERY1977