Lusczek Elizabeth R, Myers Cole, Popovsky Kimberly, Mulier Kristine, Beilman Greg, Sawyer Robert
University of Minnesota Department of Surgery, Minneapolis, MN 55455 United States.
University of Virginia Department of Surgery, Charlottesville, VA 22903 United States.
Injury. 2018 Dec;49(12):2178-2185. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2018.09.033. Epub 2018 Sep 17.
Age and sex affect outcomes from trauma. Older patients tend to be under-triaged, consume more healthcare resources, and experience worse outcomes relative to younger patients. Sex has also been associated with different outcomes, with women experiencing better outcomes than men. While baseline metabolism differs with both age and sex, no study has examined how these differences affect the response to trauma. We used high-throughput metabolomics to assess metabolic differences associated with blunt trauma according to age and sex.
Metabolic profiles were constructed using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy for trauma patients age 21-40 years (n = 20, 55% male) and >65 years (n = 22, 41% male) from plasma samples obtained on Day 1 and Day 3 of each patient's hospital stay. These were compared to profiles constructed from plasma obtained from healthy controls of the same age (21-40: n = 23, 61% male; 65+: n = 26, 50% male). Differences in metabolic profiles were assessed with partial least squares discriminant analysis.
Trauma elicits an overwhelming global stress response that includes more subtle differences in metabolism related to age and gender. Significant differences due to normal aging were also identified. Many of the metabolites measured were present in similar levels in healthy controls age 65+ as they were in trauma patients of all ages. Sex-based differences in metabolism were observed in younger trauma patients on Day 3 but not in older patients.
Differences in energy metabolism and oxidative stress were implicated in the response to trauma in all patients. Older trauma patients may enter the trauma state with pre-existing oxidative stress and energy deficits that complicate recovery. Sex-based differences in recovery from trauma support the large body of work demonstrating the role of sex in recovery from trauma.
年龄和性别会影响创伤的预后。老年患者往往分诊不足,消耗更多医疗资源,且与年轻患者相比预后更差。性别也与不同的预后相关,女性的预后比男性更好。虽然基线代谢随年龄和性别而有所不同,但尚无研究探讨这些差异如何影响对创伤的反应。我们使用高通量代谢组学来评估根据年龄和性别与钝性创伤相关的代谢差异。
使用核磁共振波谱法,根据每位患者住院第1天和第3天采集的血浆样本,构建21至40岁(n = 20,55%为男性)和65岁以上(n = 22,41%为男性)创伤患者的代谢谱。将这些代谢谱与从相同年龄的健康对照者(21 - 40岁:n = 23,61%为男性;65岁以上:n = 26,50%为男性)采集的血浆构建的代谢谱进行比较。使用偏最小二乘判别分析评估代谢谱的差异。
创伤引发了压倒性的全身应激反应,其中包括与年龄和性别相关的更细微的代谢差异。还确定了因正常衰老导致的显著差异。许多所测量的代谢物在65岁以上健康对照者中的水平与所有年龄段创伤患者中的水平相似。在第3天,年轻创伤患者中观察到基于性别的代谢差异,但老年患者中未观察到。
能量代谢和氧化应激的差异与所有患者对创伤的反应有关。老年创伤患者可能在进入创伤状态时就已存在氧化应激和能量不足,这会使恢复复杂化。创伤恢复中的性别差异支持了大量表明性别在创伤恢复中作用的研究工作。