Objectives: Vascularized composite allotransplantation is a reconstructive option after severe injury but is fraught with complications, including transplant rejection due to major histocompatibility complex mismatch in the context of allogeneic transplant, which in turn is due to altered immuno-inflammation secondary to transplant. The immunosuppressant tacrolimus can prevent rejection. Because tacrolimus is metabolized predominantly by the gut, this immunosuppressant alters the gut microbiome in multiple ways, thereby possibly affecting immunoinflammation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcute inflammation is heterogeneous in critical illness and predictive of outcome. We hypothesized that genetic variability in novel, yet common, gene variants contributes to this heterogeneity and could stratify patient outcomes. We searched algorithmically for significant differences in systemic inflammatory mediators associated with any of 551,839 SNPs in one derivation (n = 380 patients with blunt trauma) and two validation (n = 75 trauma and n = 537 non-trauma patients) cohorts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Vascularized composite allotransplantation (VCA), with nerve repair/coaptation (NR) and tacrolimus (TAC) immunosuppressive therapy, is used to repair devastating traumatic injuries but is often complicated by inflammation spanning multiple tissues. We identified the parallel upregulation of transcriptional pathways involving chemokine signaling, T-cell receptor signaling, Th17, Th1, and Th2 pathways in skin and nerve tissue in complete VCA rejection compared to baseline in 7 human hand transplants and defined increasing complexity of protein-level dynamic networks involving chemokine, Th1, and Th17 pathways as a function of rejection severity in 5 of these patients. We next hypothesized that neural mechanisms may regulate the complex spatiotemporal evolution of rejection-associated inflammation post-VCA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The role of inflammation in superficial venous reflux in varicose veins (VVs) is unknown. Computational network modeling has deduced inflammation in experimental and clinical settings. We measured immune mediators in plasma from competent and incompetent leg veins inferring the role of cellular immunity based on cytokine networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBACKGROUNDPrehospital plasma improves survival in severely injured patients transported by air ambulance. We hypothesized that prehospital plasma would be associated with a reduction in immune imbalance and endothelial damage.METHODSWe sampled blood from 405 trauma patients enrolled in the Prehospital Air Medical Plasma (PAMPer) trial upon hospital admission (0 hours) and 24 hours post admission across 6 U.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Blunt trauma patients may present with similar demographics and injury severity yet differ with regard to survival. We hypothesized that this divergence was due to different trajectories of systemic inflammation and utilized computational analyses to define these differences.
Design: Retrospective clinical study and experimental study in mice.