Impaired neutrophil exocytosis in patients with severe pneumonia.

Intensive Care Med

Department of Medicine II, Medical University of Lübeck, Germany.

Published: January 1999

Objective: Polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) are one of the major effector cells of pulmonary defence against bacterial infection. To determine whether neutrophil function is impaired in patients with severe pneumonia, we assessed the two main partial functions exocytosis and oxidative response (ROS production) in isolated neutrophils from the peripheral venous blood of pneumonia patients and healthy volunteers. In addition, pulmonary neutrophils and peripheral neutrophils were compared in pneumonia patients.

Patients And Methods: Twenty-one patients with severe pneumonia were enrolled in the study. Eleven patients were mechanically ventilated, ten patients breathed spontaneously. For comparison, ten healthy adults were studied. The release of two markers of neutrophil exocytosis, lactoferrin and myeloperoxidase (MPO), with and without stimulation by phorbol-myristate-acetate (PMA), was determined using immunoluminometric assays. ROS production was quantified using luminol-enhanced chemiluminescence. In addition, the clinical severity of pneumonia was correlated to neutrophil exocytosis.

Results: With regard to blood neutrophils, both basal and PMA-stimulated exocytosis were significantly impaired in pneumonia patients compared to healthy volunteers (basal lactoferrin secretion in pneumonia patients: 0.25+/-0.36 pg/PMN versus controls: 1.17+/-0.78 pg/PMN, p<0.01). In contrast, both basal and PMA-stimulated ROS production were increased in patients compared to controls (spontaneous chemiluminescence in pneumonia patients: 13.6x10(5) cpm versus controls: 5.5x10(5) cpm). In pneumonia patients, the pulmonary neutrophils released significantly more lactoferrin, MPO and ROS compared to blood neutrophils (basal lactoferrin secretion of pulmonary neutrophils: 1.19+/-1.55 pg/PMN; p<0,01). However, after stimulation with PMA the exocytosis of pulmonary and blood neutrophils was similar. The severity of pneumonia and prognostic indices like albumin were inversely correlated to the release of lactoferrin in blood neutrophils (p<0,05).

Conclusion: In patients with severe pneumonia, the exocytosis of blood neutrophils was significantly impaired. In contrast to this, the oxidative response was increased. Impaired bone marrow maturation of neutrophils during severe infection, perhaps due to shortened maturation time, could explain these findings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s001340050785DOI Listing

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