Esposito S
Dept. of Infectious Diseases, Second University of Naples, Italy.
J Chemother. 2001 Nov;13 Spec No 1(1):12-6. doi: 10.1179/joc.2001.13.Supplement-2.12.
It is well known that altered host defenses in general can play a significant role in the development of infection in any patient but their role becomes even more important in surgical patients where infections are the result of individual risk factors associated with the patient and other specific factors associated with the surgery itself. Thus all possible factors that can help modify the immune response should be taken into account in order to intervene, whenever possible, with therapies based on defined abnormalities to reduce the rate of post-surgical infections. Many factors associated with the patient have been clearly identified as responsible for a decreased immune response: old age, concomitant diseases (diabetes, renal and liver failure, solid and hematologic neoplasias, malnutrition, autoimmune diseases, AIDS) and concomitant therapies (corticosteroid, cytotoxic agents). Old age can affect both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses. Chronic diseases can be responsible for a reduced primary response or depression of delayed hypersensitivity reactions (renal failure, neoplasias) or changes in leukocyte function (diabetes, leukemia, lymphomas). Malnutrition frequently accompanies diseases such as cancer, chronic and acute pancreatitis, inflammatory bowel diseases. Deficiencies in important vitamins and minerals (B6, A, folate, biotin, riboflavin...) can alter significantly the leukocyte function and immune response. Finally, there appears to be innate immune-suppression following any form of injury which is correlated with its magnitude and can affect any aspect of immunity. This has been well studied both in burn and surgical trauma. Alteration of phagocytosis, opsonization and chemotaxis are typically affected in burns, whereas surgical stress can include some reduction of cell mediated immunity. The best approach today to minimizing post-surgical infections is probably, besides use of antibiotic prophylaxis, to reduce the surgical trauma which consequently reduces the stress response and immune-suppression and to optimize the immune response by maintaining homeostasis through nutritional support.
众所周知,一般而言,宿主防御机制的改变在任何患者感染的发生中都可能起重要作用,但在外科患者中其作用更为重要,因为感染是由与患者相关的个体风险因素以及与手术本身相关的其他特定因素导致的。因此,应考虑所有可能有助于调节免疫反应的因素,以便在可能的情况下,基于明确的异常情况进行干预,采用相应治疗方法以降低术后感染率。许多与患者相关的因素已被明确认定为导致免疫反应降低的原因:老年、合并疾病(糖尿病、肾衰竭和肝衰竭、实体瘤和血液系统肿瘤、营养不良、自身免疫性疾病、艾滋病)以及合并治疗(皮质类固醇、细胞毒性药物)。老年可影响体液免疫和细胞介导的免疫反应。慢性疾病可能导致初次反应降低或迟发型超敏反应受抑制(肾衰竭、肿瘤),或白细胞功能改变(糖尿病、白血病、淋巴瘤)。营养不良常伴随癌症、慢性和急性胰腺炎、炎症性肠病等疾病。重要维生素和矿物质(维生素B6、维生素A、叶酸、生物素、核黄素……)的缺乏可显著改变白细胞功能和免疫反应。最后,任何形式的损伤后似乎都会出现先天性免疫抑制,其与损伤程度相关,并可影响免疫的任何方面。这在烧伤和外科创伤中都得到了充分研究。烧伤时吞噬作用、调理作用和趋化作用通常会受到影响,而手术应激可能包括细胞介导免疫的某种程度降低。如今,除了使用抗生素预防外,尽量减少术后感染的最佳方法可能是减少手术创伤,从而降低应激反应和免疫抑制,并通过营养支持维持内环境稳定来优化免疫反应。