The American surgeon
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The American surgeon · Dec 1988
Delayed immune dysfunction following hemorrhagic shock and resuscitation.
Immune system function is thought to be depressed after hemorrhagic shock. We evaluated the delayed effect of hemorrhagic shock on the immune system in rats with and without spleens and investigated the effect of the colloid hetastarch on reticuloendothelial system (RES) function. There were six groups: controls (N = 30, no shock), two groups of shocked animals resuscitated with either hetastarch (HES, N = 13) or lactated Ringer's (LR, N = 13); the remaining three groups were identical except that splenectomy had been performed (N = 16, N = 14, and N = 16, respectively). ⋯ These data demonstrate that delayed immune function is depressed in nonsplenectomized rats. Splenectomy causes more severe immune dysfunction than does shock. Also, in similar animals without splenectomy, hetastarch does not appear to alter delayed RES function.