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Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin

Ferritin is an acute phase response protein, which may not rise as expected in acute bacterial infections. This could be due to the time required for its production or to a lack of response of ferritin to the bacterial inflammatory process. Medical records of hospitalized patients with acute hyper i...

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Autores principales: Levinson, Tal, Feigin, Eugene, Berliner, Shlomo, Shenhar-Tsarfaty, Shani, Shapira, Itzhak, Rogowski, Ori, Zeltzer, David, Goldiner, Ilana, Shtark, Moshe, Katz Shalhav, Malka, Wasserman, Asaf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10379163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511109
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411350
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author Levinson, Tal
Feigin, Eugene
Berliner, Shlomo
Shenhar-Tsarfaty, Shani
Shapira, Itzhak
Rogowski, Ori
Zeltzer, David
Goldiner, Ilana
Shtark, Moshe
Katz Shalhav, Malka
Wasserman, Asaf
author_facet Levinson, Tal
Feigin, Eugene
Berliner, Shlomo
Shenhar-Tsarfaty, Shani
Shapira, Itzhak
Rogowski, Ori
Zeltzer, David
Goldiner, Ilana
Shtark, Moshe
Katz Shalhav, Malka
Wasserman, Asaf
author_sort Levinson, Tal
collection PubMed
description Ferritin is an acute phase response protein, which may not rise as expected in acute bacterial infections. This could be due to the time required for its production or to a lack of response of ferritin to the bacterial inflammatory process. Medical records of hospitalized patients with acute hyper inflammation were retrieved and studied, looking closely at two acute phase proteins: C-reactive protein (CRP) and ferritin. The estimated time between symptom onset and the procurement of blood tests was also measured. 225 patients had a median ferritin level of 109.9 ng/mL [IQR 85.1, 131.7] and a median CRP level of 248.4 mg/L [IQR 221, 277.5]. An infectious inflammatory process was identified in 195 patients. Ferritin levels were relatively low in comparison with the CRP in each group, divided according to time from symptom onset until the procurement of blood tests. The discrepancy between high CRP and low ferritin suggests that these two acute phase response proteins utilize different pathways, resulting in a failure to increase ferritin concentrations in a documented state of hyperinflammation. A new entity of normoferremic inflammation accounts for a significant percentage of patients with acute bacterial infections, which enables bacteria to better survive the inflammation and serves as a new “inflammatory stamp”.
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spelling pubmed-103791632023-07-29 Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin Levinson, Tal Feigin, Eugene Berliner, Shlomo Shenhar-Tsarfaty, Shani Shapira, Itzhak Rogowski, Ori Zeltzer, David Goldiner, Ilana Shtark, Moshe Katz Shalhav, Malka Wasserman, Asaf Int J Mol Sci Article Ferritin is an acute phase response protein, which may not rise as expected in acute bacterial infections. This could be due to the time required for its production or to a lack of response of ferritin to the bacterial inflammatory process. Medical records of hospitalized patients with acute hyper inflammation were retrieved and studied, looking closely at two acute phase proteins: C-reactive protein (CRP) and ferritin. The estimated time between symptom onset and the procurement of blood tests was also measured. 225 patients had a median ferritin level of 109.9 ng/mL [IQR 85.1, 131.7] and a median CRP level of 248.4 mg/L [IQR 221, 277.5]. An infectious inflammatory process was identified in 195 patients. Ferritin levels were relatively low in comparison with the CRP in each group, divided according to time from symptom onset until the procurement of blood tests. The discrepancy between high CRP and low ferritin suggests that these two acute phase response proteins utilize different pathways, resulting in a failure to increase ferritin concentrations in a documented state of hyperinflammation. A new entity of normoferremic inflammation accounts for a significant percentage of patients with acute bacterial infections, which enables bacteria to better survive the inflammation and serves as a new “inflammatory stamp”. MDPI 2023-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10379163/ /pubmed/37511109 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411350 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Levinson, Tal
Feigin, Eugene
Berliner, Shlomo
Shenhar-Tsarfaty, Shani
Shapira, Itzhak
Rogowski, Ori
Zeltzer, David
Goldiner, Ilana
Shtark, Moshe
Katz Shalhav, Malka
Wasserman, Asaf
Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title_full Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title_fullStr Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title_full_unstemmed Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title_short Normoferremia in Patients with Acute Bacterial Infections—A Hitherto Unexplored Field of the Dichotomy between CRP and Ferritin Expression in Patients with Hyper Inflammation and Failure to Increase Ferritin
title_sort normoferremia in patients with acute bacterial infections—a hitherto unexplored field of the dichotomy between crp and ferritin expression in patients with hyper inflammation and failure to increase ferritin
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10379163/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37511109
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms241411350
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