• Inflammation · Aug 1998

    Case Reports

    Expansion of CD14+CD16+ monocytes in critically ill cardiac surgery patients.

    • G Fingerle-Rowson, J Auers, E Kreuzer, P Fraunberger, M Blumenstein, and L H Ziegler-Heitbrock.
    • Department of Internal Medicine I, Klinikum Grosshadern, University of Muenchen, FRG.
    • Inflammation. 1998 Aug 1;22(4):367-79.

    AbstractWe have asked whether critically ill cardiac valve surgery patients identified by a high APACHE II score exhibit an increase in the number of proinflammatory CD14+CD16+ monocytes. A group of 12 patients was studied over a period of 5 days post cardiac valve surgery for changes in blood monocyte populations. Patients were selected on day 1 post surgery to either be in good clinical condition (APACHE II Score of < or = 14; N = 9) or to be critically ill (APACHE II score of > or = 24; N = 3). The < or = 14 patients had an uneventful course and could leave the ICU after 2-3 days. Among the > or = 24 patients two showed a decrease of the score to < or = 14 within the 5 days of observation and they could leave the ICU thereafter. One > or = 24 patient (patient #2) had a persistently high score and finally died on day 28. Analysis of blood monocytes on day 1 post surgery revealed that the < or = 14 patients had normal values of CD14+CD16+ monocytes (44 +/- 9/microliter). By contrast the > or = 24 patients had increased values of these cells with 243 +/- 106 cells per microliter on day 1. The numbers of CD14+CD16+ monocytes returned to the control range over the 5 days of observation in 2 of the > or = 24 patients concomitant with the improvement of the APACHE II score. CD14+CD16+ monocytes remained, however, at a high level in patient #2, the patient with persistently high APACHE II score.

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