AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates changes in body metabolism and fat tissue in burn patients, aiming to understand how these alterations impact hypermetabolism after a severe burn injury.
  • Researchers collected blood and fat tissue samples from burn patients during hospitalization to examine inflammation, metabolism, and genetic factors affecting adipose tissue postburn.
  • Findings reveal that systemic inflammation and stress increase certain signaling pathways and fat tissue changes, potentially leading to prolonged hypermetabolic responses, providing new insights into managing burn injuries.

Article Abstract

Objective: We conducted a large-scale investigation of the systemic and adipose tissue-specific alterations in a clinical population of burn patients to identify factors that may influence hypermetabolism.

Background: Previous research has identified chronic disturbances in adipose tissue inflammation, lipolysis, and browning, which may drive the perpetuation of hypermetabolism following the severe adrenergic stress of a burn injury. Given that adipose tissue is thought to be a central node in the regulation of systemic metabolism, we believe that systematically delineating the pathologic role of adipose tissue postburn, will lead to the identification of novel interventions to mitigate morbidity and mortality from severe burns.

Methods: This was a single-institution cohort study, which obtained plasma and subcutaneous adipose tissue samples from severely burn adult patients over various time points during acute hospitalization. Whole-body clinical, metabolic, and inflammatory mediators were assessed in plasma, while genetic analyses through RT-qPCR and single-nuclei RNA sequencing were conducted in adipose tissue.

Results: Systemic inflammation and adrenergic stress increase IL-6 signaling, lipolysis, browning, and adipokine dysfunction in the adipose tissue of adult burn patients, which may further propagate the long-term hypermetabolic response. Moreover, using single-nuclei RNA sequencing, we provide the first comprehensive characterization of alterations in the adipose tissue microenvironment occurring at acute and chronic stages postburn.

Conclusion: We provide novel insight toward the effect of burns on adipokine release, inflammatory signaling pathways, and adipose heterogeneity over the trajectory of acute and chronic stages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10928875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/SLA.0000000000005880DOI Listing

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