The extent of traumatic damage determines a graded depression of the endotoxin responsiveness of peripheral blood mononuclear cells from patients with blunt injuries
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 27 (2) , 313-318
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00003246-199902000-00037
Abstract
To study whether the endotoxin responsiveness of peripheral blood mononuclear cells correlates with the severity of injury in trauma patients. Prospective, observational study. University trauma center. Fifty-nine patients with blunt trauma (Injury Severity Score [ISS] 4 to 57 points). Standard emergency department care, surgical care, and postoperative intensive care unit treatment. Whole blood and serum were obtained 94 +/- 89 (SD) mins post trauma (day 0) and during a 14-day period postinjury. Endotoxin-induced tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) synthesis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells ex vivo was tested using a whole blood assay. Serum samples were assayed for TNF-alpha concentrations. A reduced capacity of whole blood to produce TNF-alpha ex vivo with endotoxin treatment was found to be closely correlated with the ISS. The capacity to produce TNF-alpha on endotoxin stimulation of whole blood from patients with an ISS >or=to16 points was depressed immediately after trauma and did not reach normal values during the observation period. In patients with an ISS >22 points, maximum depression of the capacity of whole blood to produce TNF-alpha occurs within 100 mins post injury. In contrast, in patients with an ISS The extent of traumatic tissue damage leads to a graded depression of immunocyte function and appears to be amplified by surgical treatment. The endotoxin responsiveness of peripheral blood mononuclear cells displays a functional marker of the anatomically defined severity of injury and gives insights into the regulation of immunocyte function after severe blunt trauma. (Crit Care Med 1999; 27:313-318)Keywords
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