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This article is part of the supplement: 18th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine

Meeting abstract

Adhesion molecule, soluble adhesion molecule, and cytokine levels in patients with severe burns

S Endo1, H Nakae2, Y Yamada1, K Inada3 and S Taniguchi1

1Critical Care and Emergency Center, Iwate Medical University, 19-1 Uchimaru, Morioka 020, Japan

2Department of Critical Care Medicine, Akita University Medical School, 1-1-1 Hondo, Akita 010, Japan

3Department of Bacteriology, Iwate Medical University Medical School, 19-1 Uchimaru, Morioka 020, Japan

from 18th International Symposium on Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine
Brussels, Belgium. 17–20 March 1998

Critical Care 1998, 2(Suppl 1):P008doi:10.1186/cc138

Published: 1 March 1998

© 1998 Current Science Ltd

Object

We measured endotoxins, inflammatory cytokines and soluble adhesion molecules in the blood of 17 severe burn patients to determine the involvement of these factors in the pathophysiology in burn patients.

Design

Prospective study.

Patients

Seventeen patients with burns with a total burn surface area of 20% or more and a burn index of 15% or more.

Measurement and main results

Endotoxin was measured by an endotoxin-specific assay. Tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin 6 and interleukin 8 were measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Soluble adhesion molecules were also measured by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. CD11a, CD11b, and CD18 were measured by a flow cytometry. Their levels were high in the non-surviving group, the septic shock group, and the multiple organ dysfunction syndrome group, suggesting the possibility of a close connection between them and the evolution of the pathophysiology in patients with burns complicated by infection (Table).

Conclusion

Soluble adhesion molecules were found to indirectly reflect the level of endothelial cell adhesion molecules, suggesting that inflammatory cytokines may also be involved as factors in their production.

Table. Comparisons of the factors in the sepsis group and the sepsis-free group

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