1. Anergic patients before elective surgery have enhanced nonspecific host-defense capacity
- Author
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Tellado, Jose M., Giannias, Betty, Kapadia, Bomi, Chartrand, Louise, de Santis, Mary, and Christou, Nicolas V.
- Subjects
Surgery, Elective -- Complications ,Immune response -- Physiological aspects ,Immune response -- Regulation ,Health - Abstract
Patients with impaired immune function, as determined by their lack of reaction to certain skin tests, are said to have walk-in anergy (WA). Increased postoperative mortality has been noted in patients with WA; in most of these cases, the patients had developed sepsis (widespread response to severe infection). To learn more about the failure of WA patients' immune systems, the function of polymorphonuclear leukocyte neutrophils (PMNs) was studied. PMNs are a type of white blood cell that is activated as part of the nonspecific immune response (which is exclusive of the antibody-generating system). When infection occurs, PMNs are recruited to the infected region. The rate of PMN recruitment in WA patients was of particular interest, and was evaluated in 9 patients with WA, and in 5 patients and 5 healthy individuals, who were identified as walk-in reactive (WR). WA or WR status was determined by the magnitude of the response to skin tests using five antigens (proteins that commonly elicit an immune response). In addition, the number of PMNs delivered to a small area of the forearm was measured (using the skin window technique), as was the chemoattractant ability of the fluid in which the PMNs were recovered. This was of interest because PMNs 'home' to an infected region as a result of chemoattraction. The results revealed that WA patients had higher rates of PMN delivery than WR patients, who, in fact, had the same rate as WR controls. Fluid from WA patients also showed a greater chemoattractant ability than that of WRs. In addition, lactoferrin levels (a measure of white blood cell density) were higher in WAs than WRs or controls. The data suggest that patients with WA have a 'stimulated' immune system; the implications of this finding for postoperative recovery remain to be determined. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
- Published
- 1990