Differential immunological phenotypes are exhibited after scald and flame burns.
Publication/Presentation Date
2-1-2009
Abstract
A dysfunctional immune system is known to be part of the pathophysiology after burn trauma. However, reports that support this have used a variety of methods, with numerous variables, to induce thermal injury. We hypothesized that, all other parameters being equal, an injury infliction by a scald would yield different immunological responses than one inflicted by a flame. Here, we demonstrated that both burn methods produced a full-thickness burn, yet there was more of an increase in subdermal temperature, hematocrit, mortality, and serum IL-6 concentrations associated with the scald burn. On postinjury day 1, the scald-burned mice showed diminished lymphocyte numbers, interferon gamma production, and lymphocyte T-bet expression as compared with sham- and flame-burned mice. On postburn day 8, spleens from both sets of thermally injured animals showed an increase in proinflammatory myeloid cells as compared with sham-burned mice. Furthermore, the T-cell numbers, T-bet expression, and phenotype were changed such that interferon gamma production was higher in scald-burned mice than in sham- and flame-burned mice. Altogether, the data show that differential immunological phenotypes were observed depending on the thermal injury method used.
Volume
31
Issue
2
First Page
157
Last Page
163
ISSN
1540-0514
Published In/Presented At
Tschöp, J., Martignoni, A., Reid, M. D., Adediran, S. G., Gardner, J., Noel, G. J., Ogle, C. K., Neely, A. N., & Caldwell, C. C. (2009). Differential immunological phenotypes are exhibited after scald and flame burns. Shock (Augusta, Ga.), 31(2), 157–163. https://doi.org/10.1097/SHK.0b013e31817fbf4d
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
18650781
Department(s)
Fellows and Residents
Document Type
Article