Partrick D A, Moore F A, Moore E E, Barnett C C, Silliman C C
Department of Surgery, Denver General Hospital, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, USA.
New Horiz. 1996 May;4(2):194-210.
The continuing study of multiple organ failure (MOF) has led to the development of inflammatory models of tissue injury in contrast to earlier infectious models. This change of focus is in response to more recent clinical observations suggesting that postinjury MOF frequently occurs in the absence of infection. In the alternative "two-hit" inflammatory model that has been proposed, the initial traumatic insult "primes" the inflammatory response such that a delayed, otherwise innocuous, inflammatory insult triggers an exaggerated response. The neutrophil (PMN), being uniquely equipped to cause oxidative tissue injury via the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase system, has been implicated as an early pivotal player in this model of postinjury MOF. Similar to the "two-hit" inflammatory model, circulating PMNs respond to proinflammatory mediators by becoming primed for enhanced superoxide anion (O2.) production and by increasing adherence to endothelium of organs that are susceptible to PMN-mediated injury. Subsequent proinflammatory insults promote further neutrophil sequestration and activate them for enhanced release of O2.-. The resulting tissue injury can be perpetuated and lead to eventual end-organ damage and failure. In terms of the NADPH oxidase system, PMN priming and activation by various agonists have been well documented in vitro and lead to increased endothelial damage. PMN priming and activation are also operable in an in vivo model of gut ischemia/reperfusion, a surrogate of shock and trauma resuscitation, leading to distant organ damage. Finally, in clinical studies of severely injured trauma patients, PMN priming and activation sequences identify patients at risk for developing MOF with its associated high mortality. Further characterization of the mechanisms that regulate PMN priming and activation in the trauma patient is necessary for the development of new therapeutic interventions designed to block deleterious PMN responses which lead to MOF while not compromising beneficial PMN functions of host defense and tissue repair.
对多器官功能衰竭(MOF)的持续研究促使了与早期感染模型不同的组织损伤炎症模型的发展。这种研究重点的转变是对最近临床观察结果的回应,这些观察表明损伤后MOF常常在没有感染的情况下发生。在已提出的另一种“两次打击”炎症模型中,最初的创伤性损伤使炎症反应“致敏”,以至于延迟出现的、原本无害的炎症刺激会引发过度反应。中性粒细胞(PMN)通过烟酰胺腺嘌呤二核苷酸磷酸(NADPH)氧化酶系统具有独特的造成氧化性组织损伤的能力,在这种损伤后MOF模型中被认为是早期的关键参与者。与“两次打击”炎症模型类似,循环中的PMN通过对促炎介质产生反应而致敏,从而增强超氧阴离子(O2-)的产生,并增加对易受PMN介导损伤的器官内皮的黏附。随后的促炎刺激会促进更多的中性粒细胞滞留,并激活它们以增强O2-的释放。由此产生的组织损伤可能会持续存在,并最终导致终末器官损伤和功能衰竭。就NADPH氧化酶系统而言,各种激动剂对PMN的致敏和激活在体外已有充分记录,并导致内皮损伤增加。PMN的致敏和激活在肠道缺血/再灌注的体内模型(一种休克和创伤复苏的替代模型)中也起作用,会导致远处器官损伤。最后,在严重受伤的创伤患者的临床研究中,PMN的致敏和激活序列可识别出有发生MOF及其相关高死亡率风险的患者。进一步阐明调节创伤患者PMN致敏和激活的机制,对于开发新的治疗干预措施是必要的,这些干预措施旨在阻断导致MOF的有害PMN反应,同时又不损害宿主防御和组织修复中PMN的有益功能。