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Critical care medicine · Jan 2010
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyDifferences in outcome between obese and nonobese patients following severe blunt trauma are not consistent with an early inflammatory genomic response.
- Robert D Winfield, Matthew J Delano, David J Dixon, William S Schierding, Juan C Cendan, Lawrence Lottenberg, M Cecilia Lopez, Henry V Baker, J Perren Cobb, Lyle L Moldawer, Ronald V Maier, and Joseph Cuschieri.
- Department of Surgery, Laboratory of Inflammation Biology and Surgical Science, University of Florida College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL, USA.
- Crit. Care Med. 2010 Jan 1;38(1):51-8.
ObjectivesObesity has been demonstrated to alter a number of acute and chronic medical conditions. The effect of obesity on severely injured patients, however, remains incompletely defined. We sought to unravel potential physiologic and genomic alterations induced by obesity in severely injured blunt trauma patients.DesignA retrospective review of clinical and genomic information contained in the Inflammation and the Host Response to Injury multicenter trauma-related database examining the relationship between body mass index and the early genomic response from peripheral blood leukocytes to patient outcome following severe blunt trauma was performed.SettingMulticenter collaboration between university-based academic trauma centers.PatientsSeverely injured blunt trauma patients enrolled in the database.InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsUnivariate analysis of 455 severely injured trauma patients using the National Institutes of Health/World Health Organization body mass index classification system revealed significant increases in morbidity, including longer intensive care unit stays and a greater number of ventilator days, cardiac arrests, episodes of acute renal failure, and patients developing multiple organ failure. Regression modeling identified body mass index class as being independently associated with adverse outcomes and increased morbidity but an inverse relationship with mortality in patients who suffered severe blunt traumatic injury. Initial leukocyte genomic expression patterns between 163 patients in the four different body mass index groupings did not differ; however, analysis of gene differences between body mass index classes occurring over time demonstrated significant changes in 513 probe sets with significant pathway differences being related to cellular metabolism.ConclusionsIncreasing body mass index is associated with increased morbidity following severe blunt trauma. The initial blood leukocyte inflammatory response to blunt trauma does not appear to differ significantly between patients despite increasing body mass index. Resolution of the inflammatory response may differ between patients on the basis of body mass index; however, additional work is needed to clarify the potential causality of this finding.
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