Literature DB >> 34016916

Extrathoracic multiple trauma dysregulates neutrophil function and exacerbates pneumonia-induced lung injury.

Jennifer M Leonard1, Christina X Zhang, Liang Lu, Mark H Hoofnagle, Anja Fuchs, Regina A Clemens, Sarbani Ghosh, Shin-Wen Hughes, Grant V Bochicchio, Richard Hotchkiss, Isaiah R Turnbull.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Forty percent of critically ill trauma patients will develop an infectious complication. Pneumonia is the most common cause of death of trauma patients surviving their initial insult. We previously demonstrated that polytrauma (PT), defined as two or more severe injuries in at least two areas of the body, induces emergency hematopoiesis characterized by accelerated myelopoiesis in the bone marrow and increased myeloid cell frequency in the peripheral tissues. We hypothesized that PT alone induces priming of neutrophils, resulting in hyperactivation upon secondary exposure to bacteria and causing acute lung injury and increased susceptibility to secondary exposure to Pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia.
METHODS: C57BL/6 mice were subjected to PT consisting of a lower extremity pseudofracture, liver crush injury, and 15% blood-volume hemorrhage. Pneumonia was induced by intratracheal injection of 5 × 106 CFU live P. aeruginosa or 1 × 107 of heat-killed P. aeruginosa (HKPA). For reactive oxygen species (ROS), studies polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) were isolated by immunomagnetic bead negative selection and stimulated ex-vivo with HKPA. Reactive oxygen species production was measured by immunofluorescence. For histology, lung sections were stained by hematoxylin-eosin and analyzed by a blinded grader.
RESULTS: Polytrauma induced persistent changes in immune function at baseline and to secondary infection. Pneumonia after injury resulted in increased mortality (60% vs. 5% p < 0.01). Blood neutrophils from PT mice had higher resting (unstimulated) ROS production than in naive animals (p < 0.02) demonstrating priming of the neutrophils following PT. After intratracheal HKPA injection, bronchoalveolar lavage PMNs from injured mice had higher ROS production compared with naive mice (p < 0.01), demonstrating an overexuberant immunopathologic response of neutrophils following PT.
CONCLUSION: Polytrauma primes neutrophils and causes immunopathologic PMN ROS production, increased lung injury and susceptibility to secondary bacterial pneumonia. These results suggest that trauma-induced immune dysfunction can cause immunopathologic response to secondary infection and suggests neutrophil-mediated pulmonary damage as a therapeutic target for posttrauma pneumonia.
Copyright © 2021 American Association for the Surgery of Trauma.

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34016916      PMCID: PMC8932930          DOI: 10.1097/TA.0000000000003147

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma Acute Care Surg        ISSN: 2163-0755            Impact factor:   3.697


  30 in total

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Review 2.  Innate immune dysfunction in trauma patients: from pathophysiology to treatment.

Authors:  Karim Asehnoune; Antoine Roquilly; Edward Abraham
Journal:  Anesthesiology       Date:  2012-08       Impact factor: 7.892

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Journal:  Arch Surg       Date:  2011-03-21

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Authors:  Isaiah R Turnbull; Sarbani Ghosh; Anja Fuchs; Julia Hilliard; Christopher G Davis; Grant V Bochicchio; Robert E Southard
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2016-05       Impact factor: 3.454

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10.  Multistate point-prevalence survey of health care-associated infections.

Authors:  Shelley S Magill; Jonathan R Edwards; Wendy Bamberg; Zintars G Beldavs; Ghinwa Dumyati; Marion A Kainer; Ruth Lynfield; Meghan Maloney; Laura McAllister-Hollod; Joelle Nadle; Susan M Ray; Deborah L Thompson; Lucy E Wilson; Scott K Fridkin
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  1 in total

Review 1.  Signal Pathways and Markers Involved in Acute Lung Injury Induced by Acute Pancreatitis.

Authors:  Jialin Zhou; Pengcheng Zhou; Yingyi Zhang; Guangzhi Wang; Zhe Fan
Journal:  Dis Markers       Date:  2021-08-28       Impact factor: 3.434

  1 in total

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