| Literature DB >> 18354289 |
Eva L Murdoch1, Henry G Brown, Richard L Gamelli, Elizabeth J Kovacs.
Abstract
Infectious complications are a major cause of mortality in trauma patients. Burn patients with prior ethanol exposure have a worse prognosis than those who sustain injury but had not been drinking. We examined pulmonary infection and lung pathology in mice given ethanol (1.2 g/kg) 30 minutes before being subjected to 13 to 15% total body surface area scald burn followed by intratracheal inoculation with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (1-2 x 10(3) colony-forming units [CFUs]). Survival was monitored for up to 48 hours. Sham control groups had 100% survival after intratracheal infection regardless of ethanol exposure. Infected burned animals had 55% survival; however, survival of infected mice exposed to ethanol and burn injury was significantly lower (27%, P < .0001). When pulmonary infection was evaluated, the lungs of sham groups were negative for bacterial colonies. In addition, at 24 hours there were no significant differences in lung CFUs from infected burned animals regardless of ethanol exposure (3.0 x 10(4)). However, pulmonary bacterial content significantly decreased (1.2 x 10, P < .02) at 48 hours in mice given burn injury alone, where CFUs from the lungs of mice exposed to ethanol prior to burn did not decline (5.4 x 10(5)). At the same time point, lungs from animals given ethanol and burn injury had about a 2-fold (P < .02) increase in leukocyte infiltration and vascular congestion, as well as decreased pulmonary oxygen saturation (82.8%, P < .02), when compared with other treatment groups. In summary, ethanol exposure in postburn intratracheal infection results in the inability to clear pulmonary infection marked by a prolonged pulmonary leukocyte accumulation and a decrease in pulmonary function.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18354289 DOI: 10.1097/BCR.0b013e3181667599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Burn Care Res ISSN: 1559-047X Impact factor: 1.845