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Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing

BACKGROUND: Approximately 30,000 patients with blunt cardiac trauma are recorded each year in the United States. Blunt cardiac injuries after trauma are associated with a longer hospital stay and a poor overall outcome. Organ damage after trauma is linked to increased systemic release of pro-inflamm...

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Autores principales: Baur, Meike, Weber, Birte, Lackner, Ina, Gebhard, Florian, Pfeifer, Roman, Cinelli, Paolo, Halvachizadeh, Sascha, Teuben, Michel, Lipiski, Miriam, Cesarovic, Nikola, Pape, Hans-Christoph, Kalbitz, Miriam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7316303/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32584885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235220
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author Baur, Meike
Weber, Birte
Lackner, Ina
Gebhard, Florian
Pfeifer, Roman
Cinelli, Paolo
Halvachizadeh, Sascha
Teuben, Michel
Lipiski, Miriam
Cesarovic, Nikola
Pape, Hans-Christoph
Kalbitz, Miriam
author_facet Baur, Meike
Weber, Birte
Lackner, Ina
Gebhard, Florian
Pfeifer, Roman
Cinelli, Paolo
Halvachizadeh, Sascha
Teuben, Michel
Lipiski, Miriam
Cesarovic, Nikola
Pape, Hans-Christoph
Kalbitz, Miriam
author_sort Baur, Meike
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Approximately 30,000 patients with blunt cardiac trauma are recorded each year in the United States. Blunt cardiac injuries after trauma are associated with a longer hospital stay and a poor overall outcome. Organ damage after trauma is linked to increased systemic release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and damage-associated molecular patterns. However, the interplay between polytrauma and local cardiac injury is unclear. Additionally, the impact of surgical intervention on this process is currently unknown. This study aimed to determine local cardiac immunological and structural alterations after multiple trauma. Furthermore, the impact of the chosen fracture stabilization strategy (reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing) on cardiac alterations was studied. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: 15 male pigs were either exposed to multiple trauma (blunt chest trauma, laparotomy, liver laceration, femur fracture and haemorrhagic shock) or sham conditions. Blood samples as well as cardiac tissue were analysed 4 h and 6 h after trauma. Additionally, murine HL-1 cells were exposed to a defined polytrauma-cocktail, mimicking the pro-inflammatory conditions after multiple trauma in vitro. RESULTS: After multiple trauma, cardiac structural changes were observed in the left ventricle. More specifically, alterations in the alpha-actinin and desmin protein expression were found. Cardiac structural alterations were accompanied by enhanced local nitrosative stress, increased local inflammation and elevated systemic levels of the high-mobility group box 1 protein. Furthermore, cardiac alterations were observed predominantly in pigs that were treated by non-reamed intramedullary reaming. The polytrauma-cocktail impaired the viability of HL-1 cells in vitro, which was accompanied by a release of troponin I and HFABP. DISCUSSION: Multiple trauma induced cardiac structural alterations in vivo, which might contribute to the development of early myocardial damage (EMD). This study also revealed that reamed femoral nailing (reamed) is associated with more prominent immunological cardiac alterations compared to nailing without reaming (non-reamed). This suggests that the choice of the initial fracture treatment strategy might be crucial for the overall outcome as well as for any post-traumatic cardiac consequences.
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spelling pubmed-73163032020-06-30 Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing Baur, Meike Weber, Birte Lackner, Ina Gebhard, Florian Pfeifer, Roman Cinelli, Paolo Halvachizadeh, Sascha Teuben, Michel Lipiski, Miriam Cesarovic, Nikola Pape, Hans-Christoph Kalbitz, Miriam PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Approximately 30,000 patients with blunt cardiac trauma are recorded each year in the United States. Blunt cardiac injuries after trauma are associated with a longer hospital stay and a poor overall outcome. Organ damage after trauma is linked to increased systemic release of pro-inflammatory cytokines and damage-associated molecular patterns. However, the interplay between polytrauma and local cardiac injury is unclear. Additionally, the impact of surgical intervention on this process is currently unknown. This study aimed to determine local cardiac immunological and structural alterations after multiple trauma. Furthermore, the impact of the chosen fracture stabilization strategy (reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing) on cardiac alterations was studied. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: 15 male pigs were either exposed to multiple trauma (blunt chest trauma, laparotomy, liver laceration, femur fracture and haemorrhagic shock) or sham conditions. Blood samples as well as cardiac tissue were analysed 4 h and 6 h after trauma. Additionally, murine HL-1 cells were exposed to a defined polytrauma-cocktail, mimicking the pro-inflammatory conditions after multiple trauma in vitro. RESULTS: After multiple trauma, cardiac structural changes were observed in the left ventricle. More specifically, alterations in the alpha-actinin and desmin protein expression were found. Cardiac structural alterations were accompanied by enhanced local nitrosative stress, increased local inflammation and elevated systemic levels of the high-mobility group box 1 protein. Furthermore, cardiac alterations were observed predominantly in pigs that were treated by non-reamed intramedullary reaming. The polytrauma-cocktail impaired the viability of HL-1 cells in vitro, which was accompanied by a release of troponin I and HFABP. DISCUSSION: Multiple trauma induced cardiac structural alterations in vivo, which might contribute to the development of early myocardial damage (EMD). This study also revealed that reamed femoral nailing (reamed) is associated with more prominent immunological cardiac alterations compared to nailing without reaming (non-reamed). This suggests that the choice of the initial fracture treatment strategy might be crucial for the overall outcome as well as for any post-traumatic cardiac consequences. Public Library of Science 2020-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7316303/ /pubmed/32584885 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235220 Text en © 2020 Baur et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Baur, Meike
Weber, Birte
Lackner, Ina
Gebhard, Florian
Pfeifer, Roman
Cinelli, Paolo
Halvachizadeh, Sascha
Teuben, Michel
Lipiski, Miriam
Cesarovic, Nikola
Pape, Hans-Christoph
Kalbitz, Miriam
Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title_full Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title_fullStr Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title_full_unstemmed Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title_short Structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
title_sort structural alterations and inflammation in the heart after multiple trauma followed by reamed versus non-reamed femoral nailing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7316303/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32584885
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0235220
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