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Older patients are immunocompromised by cytokine depletion and loss of innate immune function after hip fracture surgery

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Version 2 2024-06-04, 01:19
Version 1 2016-01-08, 16:48
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posted on 2024-06-04, 01:19 authored by Alasdair SutherlandAlasdair Sutherland, A Cook, C Miller, L Duncan, R Yuecel, SD Heys, JD Hutchison, J Liversidge
PURPOSE/INTRODUCTION: We have examined the immune status of elderly patients who underwent surgery for a hip fracture, an injury associated with poor postoperative outcomes, to identify specific immune defects. METHODS: In a cohort observational study, 16 patients undergoing surgery for hip fractures had immune function evaluation prior to surgery, and then at 3 and 7 days postoperatively, using flow cytometry for phenotype and for monocyte and granulocyte phagocytic function and respiratory burst. Serum samples were stored and batch analyzed using a human cytokine 25-plex panel. RESULTS: We report significant loss of innate immune function, related specifically to reduced granulocyte numbers by day 7 (P < .0001, flow cytometry; P < .05 white blood cells), and although granulocyte ability to take up opsonized Escherichia coli was increased (P < .05), the ability of those cells to generate a respiratory burst was reduced at days 3 and 7 (P < .05). Monocyte respiratory burst was also significantly reduced (P < .05). Serum cytokine levels indicated very poor T-cell function. CONCLUSION: We have demonstrated that the antimicrobial immune response is profoundly reduced after surgery in elderly patients with hip fractures. The effect was sustained up to 7 days postoperatively, identifying these patients as particularly vulnerable to bacterial infections.

History

Journal

Geriatric orthopaedic surgery & rehabilitation

Volume

6

Pagination

295-302

Location

London , Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2151-4585

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, The Author(s)

Issue

4

Publisher

Sage

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