Smith S J, Bos G, Esseveld M R, Van Eijk H G
Clin Chim Acta. 1976 Jul 1;70(1):127-32. doi: 10.1016/0009-8981(76)90014-0.
In 30 healthy people we investigated the hypothesis that therapeutic measures trigger the acute phase reaction. In order of severity we analyzed: (1) the effects of an intramuscular injection of 2.5 ml 0.14 molar NaCl (6 patients), (2) the effects of an indwelling venous catheter for 24 h (7 patients), and for 72 h (8 patients), (3) the effects of cardiac catheterization (arterial and venous catheterization) carried out in 9 patients. In clinical investigations of the acute phase reaction, an intramuscular injection and a 24- or 72-h indwelling catheter, brought in by venipuncture, are acceptable because they do not provoke an acute phase reaction. A venous cutdown associated with an arterial puncture is not acceptable because this injury evokes a positive acute phase reaction. This was also observed in two patients who developed phlebitis during a 24-h indwelling venous catheter. Only a positive acute phase reaction was found, not a negative one.