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Instant intra-operative neutropenia despite the emergence of banded (CD16

Authors :
Michel, Teuben
Marjolein, Heeres
Taco, Blokhuis
Arne, Hollman
Nienke, Vrisekoop
Edward, Tan
Roman, Pfeifer
Hans-Christoph, Pape
Leo, Koenderman
Luke P H, Leenen
Source :
Injury. 52(3)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Deregulation of polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMNs) is an essential step in the development of inflammatory complications upon trauma. Different neutrophil subtypes have been identified recently, however, the role of neutrophil subtypes in immunoregulation upon trauma is unclear. We hypothesize that extensive trauma surgery causes instant progressive heterogeneity of the blood neutrophil pool, and increased appearance of young (CD16A standardized extensive thoraco-abdominal porcine trauma surgery model was utilized, and 12 animals were included. Blood was collected at defined timepoints and neutrophil numbers and subtypes were studied by flowcytometry. Neutrophil subtypes were identified by differences in cell surface expression levels of CD16 (FcγRIII) and CD62L (L-selectin). Porcine neutrophil subtypes were further characterized after flow sorting.Eleven animals survived the 3-hour surgical protocol. Neutrophil numbers dropped significantly from a mean of 8,6 ± 3,5 × 10Standardized extensive trauma surgery was associated with instant progressive neutropenia and increased heterogeneity of the blood neutrophil pool. Furthermore, three different neutrophil subsets in peripheral porcine blood were identified over the course of surgery. Further studies should clarify their precise role in the development of early organ failure upon extensive trauma surgery. This for the first time exemplifies experimentally the time constraints and impact of damage control surgery after severe trauma.

Details

ISSN :
18790267
Volume :
52
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Injury
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........458923232b474d430754ea2b8e101eb4