Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesiology
2. Department of Medicine
3. Department of Microbiology
4. The Witebsky Center for Microbial Pathogenesis, University at Buffalo
5. Veterans Administration Western New York Healthcare System, Buffalo, New York 14214
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The development of a nosocomial pneumonia is facilitated by alterations in host innate pulmonary antibacterial defenses following surgical trauma, which can result in decreased pulmonary bacterial clearance and increased morbidity and mortality. In a murine model of postoperative nosocomial infection, surgical stress (laparotomy) decreased
Escherichia coli
clearance from the lungs of animals that underwent surgery. Consistent with previous studies, (i) pulmonary levels of tumor necrosis factor alpha at 6 h and of interleukin-1β (IL-1β), IL-6, and gamma interferon (IFN-γ) at 24 h post-bacterial infection (PBI) were decreased in animals that underwent laparotomy 24 h prior to
E. coli
infection (LAP/
E. coli
) compared to animals that received
E. coli
only; (ii) KC and macrophage inhibitory protein 2 were elevated at 6 h PBI in LAP/
E. coli
animals compared to
E. coli
-only animals; however, at 24 h PBI, levels were higher in the
E. coli
-only group; (iii) at 24 h PBI, monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 was lower in the LAP/
E. coli
group compared to the
E. coli
-only group; (iv) IL-10 levels were unaffected at all time points evaluated; and (v) the total number of neutrophils present in the lungs of LAP/
E. coli
animals at 6 h PBI was decreased in comparison to that in
E. coli
-only animals, resulting in decreased bacterial clearance and increased mortality in LAP/
E. coli
animals by 24 h PBI. Similar changes in cytokine profiles, pulmonary bacterial clearance, and mortality were consistent with reported findings in patients following surgical trauma. This model, therefore, provides a clinically relevant system in which the molecular and cellular mechanisms that lead to the development of nosocomial pneumonia can be further explored.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Microbiology (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
24 articles.
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