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Journal Article

Citation

Apple CG, Miller ES, Loftus TJ, Kannan KB, Parvataneni HK, Hagen JE, Efron PA, Mohr AM. J. Surg. Res. 2020; 248: 109-116.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery and Sepsis and Critical Illness Research Center, University of Florida Health, Gainesville, Florida. Electronic address: alicia.mohr@surgery.ufl.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jss.2019.10.046

PMID

31881381

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe traumatic injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Our goal was to analyze blunt traumatic injury by injury severity score (ISS) and compare with elective hip repair, as a transient injury, and healthy control with the hypothesis that more severe injury would lead to an increase in neuroendocrine activation, systemic inflammation, and worse anemia.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A prospective observational cohort study was performed at a level 1 trauma center, comparing blunt trauma patients (n = 37), elective hip replacement patients (n = 26), and healthy controls (n = 8). Bone marrow and plasma were assessed for hyperadrenergic state, erythropoiesis, and systemic inflammation. Trauma patient's ISS ranged from 4 to 41 and were broken down into quartiles for analysis. The ISS quartiles were 4-13, 14-20, 21-26, and 27-41.

RESULTS: Plasma norepinephrine, interleukin-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and hepcidin increased progressively as ISS increased. Hemoglobin significantly decreased as ISS increased and packed red blood cell (pRBC) transfusion increased as ISS increased. Elective hip replacement patients had an appropriate increase in the bone marrow expression of erythropoietin and the erythropoietin receptor, which was absent in all trauma patient groups.

CONCLUSIONS: Increased neuroendocrine activation, systemic inflammation, and anemia correlated with worsening injury severity, lower age, and increased pRBC transfusions. Elective hip replacement patients have only minimal systemic inflammation with an appropriate bone marrow response to anemia. This study demonstrates a link between injury severity, neuroendocrine activation, systemic inflammation, and the bone marrow response to anemia.

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Anemia; Critical care; Erythropoiesis; Inflammation; Trauma

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