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Researches in immunological responses after burn injury in China / 中华烧伤杂志
Chinese Journal of Burns ; (6): 390-392, 2008.
Article in Chinese | WPRIM | ID: wpr-257472
ABSTRACT
For five decades it has been recognized that severe burn injury may precipitate in marked alterations in immune function, resulting in life-threatening systemic infections, sepsis, multiple organ failure, and even death. Extensive and deep burns exert widespread and profound impacts on various cells and molecules of the immune system. The general characteristics of abnormal immune responses following major burns are hyperinflammatory response and hypoimmune response of innate and adaptive immunity. These are recognized as postburn immune dysfunction (PID). The stress reaction, massive necrotic tissue, shock, infection, malnutrition and various therapeutic procedures after burns alter the microenvironment of the immune cells and molecules in which they reside, and consequently result in the changes in immune cells and their secretions in quantity and/or activity, and also aberrant signal transduction in different immune cells. These events constitute the cellular and molecular bases in the pathogenesis of PID. The main clinical consequences of PID include tissue damages and increased susceptibility to opportunistic pathogens caused by refractory inflammation and suppressed adaptive immunity. In order to decrease the morbidity of these lethal complications, efforts to improve the immune dysfunction after burn injury have been made not only at the integral level of etiological factors, but also at the cellular and molecular levels of its mechanisms. In this review, all these above-mentioned aspects of PID are comprehensively discussed.
Subject(s)
Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Burns / Allergy and Immunology / Immune System Diseases Limits: Humans Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Burns Year: 2008 Type: Article

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Full text: Available Index: WPRIM (Western Pacific) Main subject: Burns / Allergy and Immunology / Immune System Diseases Limits: Humans Language: Chinese Journal: Chinese Journal of Burns Year: 2008 Type: Article