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Effects of laparotomy on systemic macrophage function.
Authors:H P Redmond  K Hofmann  J Shou  P Leon  C J Kelly  J M Daly
Affiliation:Harrison Department of Surgical Research, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia.
Abstract:Surgical trauma induces immunosuppression that may adversely influence survival. This study examined the effect of laparotomy on two different macrophage populations, peritoneal macrophages (PM phi) and Kupffer cells. Female, 6- to 8-week old, CFW/C3H-HeN mice (n = 160) were randomly allocated to one of three study groups: control, ether anesthetic only, or ether anesthetic and laparotomy. On postoperative days 1 and 3, PM phis and Kupffer cells were harvested and assayed for superoxide anion production (O2-), percent macrophage phagocytosis of Candida albicans (CAP), percent C. albicans killed by macrophages (CAK), percent major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-class II antigen expression, and antigen presentation. Macrophages isolated on postoperative day 1 were also cocultured with 100 units/10(6) cells/ml interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma). Laparotomy significantly impaired microbicidal activity (O2-, percent CAP, and percent CAK) and antigen presentation on postoperative day 1. On postoperative day 3, O2- and antigen presentation were increased significantly (p less than 0.05) over control values, indicating a rebound phenomenon. Kupffer cell microbicidal function was unchanged on postoperative days 1 and 3. The initial immune impairment (PM phis: O2-, CAP, and CAK) was abrogated by IFN-gamma treatment. In immunosuppressed hosts after injury, administration of macrophage-activating factors such as IFN-gamma could be of therapeutic benefit.
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