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Journal Article |
Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Pretoria, South Africa.
BACKGROUND: The cause of the anemia of patients in surgical intensive care units (SICU) is not completely clear but is likely to be multifactorial. This study investigated a possible role for immune activation in the anemia of SICU patients. METHODS: Neopterin plasma levels, as a measure of T-cell-macrophage-axis activation, RBC-counts, Hb, Hct, MCV, MCH, MCHC, RDW, HDW, red cell morphology and iron status were determined in a group of 47 SICU patients. RESULTS: The study confirms the presence of a moderate anemia (Hb = 10.38 +/- 13 g/dL) in SICU patients. Abnormal red blood cell morphology was observed in 82% of all patients over at least part of their ICU-stay. Markedly enhanced T-cell-macrophage-axis activity was evidenced by a significant increase in the plasma neopterin levels of the patient group (44 +/- 79.6 nmol/L) compared to that of the control group (3.38 +/- 4.9 nmol/L). Iron metabolism was found to be disturbed. CONCLUSIONS: The red cell distribution width, the morphological results, the enhanced macrophage activation state, as well as the results of the iron status, point towards a contribution of an immune-associated functional iron deficiency to the anemia of SICU patients.
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J. L. Vincent, J.-F. Baron, K. Reinhart, L. Gattinoni, L. Thijs, A. Webb, A. Meier-Hellmann, G. Nollet, D. Peres-Bota, and for the ABC Investigators Anemia and Blood Transfusion in Critically Ill Patients JAMA, September 25, 2002; 288(12): 1499 - 1507. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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