Shock : molecular, cellular, and systemic pathobiological aspects and therapeutic approaches : the official journal the Shock Society, the European Shock Society, the Brazilian Shock Society, the International Federation of Shock Societies
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A severe burn leads to hypermetabolism and catabolism resulting in compromised function and structure of essential organs. The massive release of cytokines is implicated in this hypermetabolic response. The aim of the present study was to compare cytokine expression profiles from severely burned children without signs of infections or inhalation injury (n = 19) to the cytokine profiles from normal, noninfected, nonburned children (n = 14). ⋯ After severe burn, a specific cytokine expression profile is observed in patients without complications such as inhalation injury or sepsis. The cytokine concentrations decrease during 5 weeks after burn but remain elevated over nonburned values. Furthermore, the elevation in most serum cytokine levels during the first week after burn may indicate a potential window of opportunity for therapeutic intervention.
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Comparative Study
Altered hemodynamic counter-regulation to hemorrhage by acute moderate alcohol intoxication.
The incidence of traumatic injury, frequently associated with hemorrhagic shock, is higher in the alcohol-intoxicated individual. The outcome, as it pertains to both morbidity and mortality of this population, is partly dependent on duration of alcohol exposure and levels of blood alcohol at time of injury. In previous studies, we demonstrated that prolonged alcohol intoxication (15-h duration) produces marked hemodynamic instability and exacerbated early lung proinflammatory cytokine expression after hemorrhagic shock. ⋯ Only the hemorrhage-induced rise in lung IL-6 and tumor necrosis factor alpha was prevented by alcohol administration. In contrast, spleen cytokine responses to hemorrhage were not altered by alcohol administration. These results indicate that moderate acute alcohol intoxication results in significant modulation of hemodynamic and neuroendocrine responses to hemorrhagic shock.
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Mechanical ventilation (MV) with large tidal volumes (V(T)) causes ventilator induced lung injury. Whereas immediate effects of short-term injurious ventilation are well studied, little is known about its long-term effects. We aimed to establish an animal model of selective injurious MV, permitting assessment of the long-term course of ventilation-induced lung injury. ⋯ Twenty-four hours after MV, alveolar levels of humoral (tumor necrosis factor alpha, interleukin 6) and cellular (polymorphonuclear leukocytes) inflammatory markers were increased, and histological alterations were present in lungs ventilated with high V(T). A delayed decrease in PaO2 was noted 24 h after MV, with high V(T) delivered to one lung as compared with low V(T) delivered to both lungs. This animal model permits assessment of the long-term course of ventilation-induced lung injury and shows that pulmonary inflammation and histological alterations are present 24 h after unilateral injurious ventilation.
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Resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock relies on fluid retransfusion. However, the optimal properties of the fluid have not been established. The aim of the present study was to test the influence of the concentration of hydroxyethyl starch (HES) solution on plasma viscosity and colloid osmotic pressure (COP), systemic and microcirculatory recovery, and oxygen delivery and consumption after resuscitation, which were assessed in the hamster chamber window preparation by intravital microscopy. ⋯ The increase in COP led to an increase in blood volume as shown by a reduction in hematocrit. Mean arterial pressure was significantly improved in animals receiving 10% and 20% solutions. In conclusion, the present results show that the increase in the concentration of HES, leading to hyperoncotic and hyperviscous solutions, is beneficial for resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock because normalization of COP and viscosity led to a rapid recovery of microcirculatory parameters.