| Literature DB >> 35896592 |
Christopher Pereira1, Anisha H Perera2, Nung Rudarakanchana2, Benjamin H L Harris3, Matteo Di Giovannantonio3, Simon D Taylor-Robinson4, Melanie Dani1, Michael Fertleman5.
Abstract
There is growing evidence that surgery can drive an inflammatory response in the brain. However, the mechanisms behind this response are incompletely understood. Here, we investigate the hypotheses that 1. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cytokines increase after vascular surgery and 2. That these changes in CSF cytokines are interrelated. Patients undergoing either open or endovascular elective surgery of the thoracic aorta were invited to participate in this study. Cerebrospinal fluid samples were taken before surgery and on the first post-operative day. These were analysed for the presence of ten cytokines by immunoassay to examine for post-operative changes in cytokine levels. After surgery, there were significant increases in six out of the ten measured CSF cytokines (IL-1β, 2, 6, 8, 10 and 13). This included changes in both putative pro-inflammatory (IL-1β, 6 and 8) and putative anti-inflammatory (IL-2, 10 and 13) cytokines. The greatest increases occurred in IL-6 and IL-8, which showed a 63-fold and a 31-fold increase respectively. There was strong intercorrelation between CSF cytokines after the operation. Following surgery on the thoracic aorta, there was a marked increase in CSF cytokines, consistent with a potential role in neuroinflammation. The ten measured cytokines showed intercorrelation after the operation, indicating that a balance between multiple pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines may be present.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35896592 PMCID: PMC9329310 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-16882-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Demographic and Pre-operative Information.
| ID | Sex | Age | Past Medical History | Past Surgical History | Drug History |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | F | 73 | HTN, high cholesterol, ex-smoker | Carotid-subclavian bypass | Bisoprolol, paracetamol, simvastatin |
| 5 | M | 80 | CABG, high cholesterol, prostate cancer | Radical prostatectomy, EVAR | Aspirin, simvastatin, omeprazole, paracetamol |
| 10 | F | 56 | Endometriosis, HTN, high cholesterol, ex-smoker | Hybrid-vascular surgery (2008) | Atorvastatin, amlodipine, perindopril |
| 12 | F | 77 | Left occipital ischaemic stroke, asthma, IHD, T2DM, high cholesterol, HTN | Nil | NR |
| 13 | F | 40 | HTN, Marfan syndrome with pectus excavatum and dural ectasia, heart failure | Type A aortic dissection—emergency aortic valve sparing open replacement of root/ascending aorta and proximal arch (2007), arch hybrid (2012)- post operative cardiac arrest followed by tracheostomy, myopathy and prolonged ITU stay | Amlodipine, perindopril, bisoprolol, aspirin, spironolactone |
| 18 | M | 54 | Marfan syndrome, ICD, blind, bilateral cataracts, stroke, HTN, high cholesterol, T2DM | Open arch and DTA replacement, AVR, and ascending aorta to LCCA bypass, post operative occipital infarct, haemorrhage and large SDH requiring craniotomy and evacuation | Amlodipine, indapamide, metoprolol, senna, doxazosin, gliclazide, losartan, pregabalin, lansoprazole, paracetamol, warfarin, tinzaparin |
| 20 | M | 74 | Paraplegia, CKD | Open type 2 thoracic aorta repair (2000), then dilatation of visceral aortic patch | NR |
| 24 | M | 62 | HTN | Nil | Carvedilol |
| 25 | M | 72 | HTN, high cholesterol, current smoker, T2DM, COPD | Nil | NR |
| 27 | M | 65 | HTN, high cholesterol, smoker, COPD, schizophrenia | EVAR (2013) | Amlodipine, procyclidine |
AVR Aortic valve replacement, CKD Chronic kidney disease, CABG Coronary artery bypass graft, COPD Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, DTA Descending thoracic aorta, EVAR Endovascular aneurysm repair, HTN Hypertension, ICD Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator, IHD Ischaemic heart disease, ITU Intensive therapy unit, LCCA left common carotid artery, NR Not recorded, SHD Subdural haematoma, T2DM Type 2 Diabetes. A table showing the medical and surgical backgrounds for the ten patients included in this study.
Summary of cytokine measurements in CSF.
| Cytokine | Timepoint | CSF Median [IQR] | Adjusted- | Average fold change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1β | T1 T2 | 0.14 [0.14–0.15] 0.60 [0.36–0.84] | < 0.01 | 5.4 |
| IL-2 | T1 T2 | 0.20 [0.20–0.23] 0.30 [0.21–0.81] | < 0.05 | 4.6 |
| IL-4 | T1 T2 | 0.02 [0.01–0.03] 0.03 [0.01–0.08] | ns | 4.5 |
| IL-6 | T1 T2 | 0.98 [0.39–1.28] 15.91 [9.73–62.57] | < 0.01 | 63.3 |
| IL-8 | T1 T2 | 26.85 [9.35–42.32] 919.23 [333.42–1366.63] | < 0.01 | 31.0 |
| IL-10 | T1 T2 | 0.30 [0.19–0.43] 0.85 [0.37–1.00] | < 0.05 | 4.5 |
| IL-12p70 | T1 T2 | 0.09 [0.08–0.17] 0.11 [0.08–0.12] | ns | 2.8 |
| IL-13 | T1 T2 | 1.14 [0.55–1.86] 2.78 [1.67–12.75] | < 0.01 | 5.2 |
| IFN-γ | T1 T2 | 0.605 [0.54–0.67] 0.605 [0.54–0.63] | ns | 2.6 |
| TNF-α | T1 T2 | 0.52 [0.32–0.96] 0.99 [0.51–2.10] | ns | 3.9 |
Cytokine levels in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) before surgery (T1) and the day after surgery (T2), ns = non-significant.
Figure 1Post-operative changes in CSF cytokines. Levels of cytokines in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) before surgery (T1) and the day after surgery (T2). Each patient is represented by a colour that is consistent across the box-plots. Only cytokines that showed statistically significant changes following surgery are shown.
Figure 2Correlation plots between CSF cytokines before and after surgery. Correlation plots between cytokines for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) before surgery (T1) and the day after surgery (T2).