| Literature DB >> 35776194 |
Koen Visser1, Harm Jan van der Horn2, Arno R Bourgonje3, Bram Jacobs2, Martin H de Borst4, Pieter E Vos5, Marian L C Bulthuis6, Harry van Goor6, Joukje van der Naalt6.
Abstract
Serum concentrations of free thiols (key components of the extracellular antioxidant machinery) reflect the overall redox status of the human body. The objective of this exploratory study was to determine the concentrations of serum free thiols in the acute phase after traumatic brain injury (TBI) and their association with long-term outcome. In this observational cohort study, patients with TBI of various severity were included from a biobank of prospectively enrolled TBI patients. Further eligibility criteria included an available blood sample and head computed tomography data, obtained within 24 h of injury, as well as a functional outcome assessment (Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE)) at 6 months post-injury. Serum free thiol concentrations were markedly lower in patients with TBI (n = 77) compared to healthy controls (n = 55) (mean ± standard deviation; 210.3 ± 63.3 vs. 301.8 ± 23.9 μM, P < 0.001) indicating increased oxidative stress. Concentrations of serum free thiols were higher in patients with complete functional recovery (GOSE = 8) than in patients with incomplete recovery (GOSE < 8) (median [interquartile range]; 235.7 [205.1-271.9] vs. 205.2 [173-226.7] μM, P = 0.016), suggesting that patients with good recovery experience less oxidative stress in the acute phase after TBI or have better redox function. Acute TBI is accompanied by a markedly lower concentration of serum free thiols compared to healthy controls indicating that serum free thiols may be a novel biomarker of TBI. Future studies are warranted to validate our findings and explore the clinical applicability and prognostic capability of this candidate-biomarker.Entities:
Keywords: Free radicals; Head injury; Markers; Outcome; Redox
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35776194 PMCID: PMC9553822 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-022-11240-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 6.682
Fig. 1Flowchart of patient inclusion. RUBICS Radboud University Nijmegen Brain Injury Cohort Study, TBI traumatic brain injury, CT computed tomography, GOSE Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended
Demographic and clinical characteristics of 77 traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients and 55 healthy controls (HC)
| Mild TBI | Moderate TBI | Severe TBI | HC | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agea | 47.7 (16.3) | 44.7 (18.7) | 37.9 (15.6) | 50.0 (12.0) |
| Gender—female | 8 (36.4%) | 13 (52.0%) | 9 (30.0%) | 21 (38.2%) |
| Serum free thiols, μMa | 225.9 (60.8) | 209.7 (77.1) | 199.2 (50.9) | 301.8 (32.9) |
| Trauma mechanism | ||||
| Traffic | 9 (40.9%) | 16 (64.0%) | 20 (66.7%) | – |
| Falls | 10 (45.5%) | 7 (28.0%) | 5 (17.2%) | – |
| Sports | 3 (13.6%) | 1 (4.0%) | 2 (6.7%) | – |
| Violence | – | – | 2 (6.7%) | – |
| Other/unknown | – | 1 (4.0%) | 1 (3.3%) | – |
| GCSb | 15 (13–15) | 11 (9–12) | 3 (3–8) | – |
| LOC | 12 (54.6%) | 19 (76.0%) | 30 (100%) | – |
| PTA | 14 (63.6%) | 23 (92.0%) | 29 (96.7%) | – |
| ISSa | 13.8 (9.1) | 18.8 (12.2) | 36.5 (10.5) | – |
| ISSea | 9.6 (9.8) | 8.3 (12.1) | 18.9 (12.7) | – |
| AISHb | 2 (1–4) | 3 (2–4) | 5 (4–5) | – |
| Polytrauma | 7 (31.8%) | 7 (28.0%) | 22 (73.3%) | – |
| Hypotension | – | 2 (8.0%) | 3 (10.0%) | – |
| Hypoxia | 1 (4.6) | 3 (12.0%) | 1 (3.3%) | – |
| Time to sample, minb | 100 (10–675) | 75 (28–600) | 90 (10–470) | – |
| CT-positive | 4 (18.2%) | 16 (64.0%) | 28 (93.3%) | – |
| Complete recovery (GOSE 8) | 13 (59.1%) | 10 (40.0%) | 5 (16.7%) | – |
GCS Glasgow Coma Score, LOC loss of consciousness, PTA post-traumatic amnesia, ISS Injury severity score, ISSe Injury severity score extracranial, AISH Abbreviated Injury Score Head, TCDB Traumatic Coma Databank, CT computed tomography, GOSE Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended, μM micromolar, min minutes
*At least one pupil unreactive
aMean (sd); bmedian (min–max); all other variables: n (%)
Fig. 2Comparing the concentration of serum free thiols between patients with TBI and healthy controls. A Serum free thiol levels are significantly decreased in traumatic brain injury compared with healthy controls; B levels of serum free thiols are also significantly lower in each TBI severity group compared to controls. *P < 0.001. TBI traumatic brain injury, μM micromolar
Median (interquartile range) of the initial serum concentrations of serum free thiols (μM) by clinical variables and outcomes
| Variable | Serum free thiols | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| TBI severity | 0.385 | ||
| Mild | 22 | 215.1 (201.1–258.7) | |
| Moderate | 25 | 226 (173–258.8) | |
| Severe | 30 | 212 (175.3–226.7) | |
| Age | 0.494 | ||
| < 65 | 69 | 215.3 (183.4–257) | |
| ≥ 65 | 8 | 209 (197.1–213.2 | |
| Sex | 0.193 | ||
| Male | 47 | 215 (192.6–258) | |
| Female | 30 | 211.8 (166–244.6) | |
| CT | 0.151 | ||
| CT– | 29 | 219.6 (201.8–266.6) | |
| CT + | 48 | 212.6 (172.9–242.1) | |
| LOC | 0.564 | ||
| Yes | 61 | 215.1 (201.6–239.9) | |
| No | 16 | 213.7 (172.6–245.3) | |
| PTA | 0.657 | ||
| Yes | 66 | 214.7 (184.3–254.2) | |
| No | 11 | 206.3 (190.7–226.9) | |
| Polytrauma | 0.001 | ||
| Yes | 36 | 202.1 (160.6–216.8) | |
| No | 41 | 237.2 (206.3–269.5) | |
| Hypoxia* | 0.001 | ||
| Yes | 8 | 123.3 (80.5–204.4) | |
| No | 68 | 216.8 (193.2–257.4) | |
| Hypotension* | 0.001 | ||
| Yes | 7 | 114.4 (74.1–147.8) | |
| No | 69 | 215.4 (195.8–257.2) | |
| Incomplete recovery | 49 | 205.2 (173–226.7) | – |
| Complete recovery | 28 | 235.7 (205.1–271.9) | 0.016 |
| Overall | 77 | 213.7 (183.4–245.3) | – |
P values of Mann–Whitney U test in the case of two groups and Kruskal–Wallis in case of three groups
μM micromolar
*Includes suspected cases
Fig. 3A Injury Severity Score extracranial (ISSe) correlates with serum free thiols (μM); B serum free thiols (μM) are significantly decreased in isolated TBI compared to healthy controls. *P = 0.01. μM micromolar, TBI traumatic brain injury
Unadjusted odds ratios of clinical and biochemical variables for complete recovery (GOS-E = 8) at 6 months after traumatic brain injury, using univariate logistic regression
| Variable | OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|
| Age, year | 1.01 (0.98–1.04) |
| Gender | 2.12 (0.78–5.73) |
| GCS | 1.18 (1.05–1.31)** |
| Hypotension* | 0.66 (0.12–3.66) |
| Hypoxia* | 0.54 (0.10–2.9) |
| AISH | 0.49 (0.32–0.74)** |
| ISSe | 0.95 (0.90–0.99)* |
| PTA | 0.43 (0.12–1.55) |
| LOC | 0.26 (0.08–0.81)* |
| CT | 0.21 (0.08–0.57)** |
| Serum free thiols, μM | 1.01 (1.0–1.02)* |
GOSE Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended, CI confidence interval, OR odds ratio, GCS Glasgow Coma Score, AISH Abbreviated Injury Score Head, ISSe Injury Severity Score extracranial, PTA post-traumatic amnesia, LOC loss of consciousness, CT computed tomography, μM micromolar
*P < 0.05, **P < 0.001