Invited review: Deterioration of the immune system after trauma: signals and cellular mechanisms

Multiple trauma leads to a deterioration of the immune system. On the one hand, hyperinflammation mediates remote organ damage and may lead to multi-organ failure. On the other hand, immunosuppression develops and promotes an enhanced risk to acquire infectious complications after trauma. The mechan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Innate Immunity 2008-12, Vol.14 (6), p.333-344
Hauptverfasser: Flohé, Stefanie B., Flohé, Sascha, Schade, F. Ulrich
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creator Flohé, Stefanie B.
Flohé, Sascha
Schade, F. Ulrich
description Multiple trauma leads to a deterioration of the immune system. On the one hand, hyperinflammation mediates remote organ damage and may lead to multi-organ failure. On the other hand, immunosuppression develops and promotes an enhanced risk to acquire infectious complications after trauma. The mechanisms that underlie these opposing consequences of trauma are not yet completely understood. There is increasing evidence that endogenous danger signals that derive from destroyed tissues play a role in trauma-induced immune dysfunction. Here, we give an overview on the common animal models that are used to investigate trauma-induced pathology, potential signals and cellular mechanisms that support the imbalance between inflammation and counter-regulation after trauma.
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source Sage Journals GOLD Open Access 2024
subjects Animals
Antigen Presentation
Dendritic Cells - immunology
Disease Models, Animal
Heat-Shock Proteins - immunology
HMGB1 Protein - immunology
Humans
Immune System - immunology
Immune System - physiopathology
Immunity, Cellular
Immunity, Innate
Macrophages - immunology
Multiple Trauma - immunology
Multiple Trauma - pathology
Multiple Trauma - physiopathology
Signal Transduction - immunology
T-Lymphocyte Subsets - immunology
Th1 Cells - immunology
title Invited review: Deterioration of the immune system after trauma: signals and cellular mechanisms
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