Bone Marrow Adipokine Expression Was Associated With Decreased Erythroid Colony Growth After Trauma

Background Proinflammatory and immunomodulatory adipokines are linked to inflammation in critically ill patients but are poorly studied after injury. We hypothesized that trauma would induce systemic adipokine release and influence erythroid suppression. Methods Blood and bone marrow (BM) were colle...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American surgeon 2023-04, Vol.89 (4), p.558-565
Hauptverfasser: Kelly, Lauren S., Kannan, Kolenkode B., Munley, Jennifer A., Pons, Erick E., Parvataneni, Hari K., Hagen, Jennifer E., Efron, Philip A., Mohr, Alicia M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Proinflammatory and immunomodulatory adipokines are linked to inflammation in critically ill patients but are poorly studied after injury. We hypothesized that trauma would induce systemic adipokine release and influence erythroid suppression. Methods Blood and bone marrow (BM) were collected from trauma patients (ISS > 15, n = 90) and compared to patients undergoing elective hip replacement (n = 37). Plasma adipokine levels were measured, and BM was assayed for adipokine transcription and erythroid progenitor growth potential. Differences were detected using t-tests and correlations using simple linear regression. Results Trauma patients exhibited decreased adiponectin (1.8* vs 3.4 mg/mL) and increased leptin (7.8* vs 4.6 ng/mL) and resistin (3.1* vs 2.5 ng/mL), with sex- and age-specific differences. They also showed increased BM visfatin transcription. Adipokine transcription negatively correlated with erythroid progenitor growth. Conclusion Adipose tissue activity is linked to inflammatory responses after injury, with variability by age and sex. Bone marrow adipose tissue may influence erythroid recovery after trauma.
ISSN:0003-1348
1555-9823
DOI:10.1177/00031348221135772