Purpose: To study the effects of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on polymorhonuclear neutrophil (PMN) function and phenotype by comparing neutrophils from critically ill patients with SIRS against those from healthy blood donors. Material and Methods: Intensive care unit patients (n = 110) who met at least one SIRS criterion were recruited to the study. One hundred healthy blood donors were recruited as normal controls. Results: Polymorphonuclear cells from critically ill patients with SIRS were more resistant to activation than PMNs from healthy donors, but when stimulated had an exaggerated microbicidal response. Buffer-treated PMNs from patients with SIRS had significantly higher CD43 surface expression that may inhibit he...
Neutrophils are main players in the effector phase of the host defense against micro-organisms and h...
Abstract Context: Immune dysfunction following major traumatic injury is complex and strongly assoc...
Item does not contain fulltextThe investigation of the trauma-induced innate immune responses is ham...
Purpose: To study the effects of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on polymorhonuclear ...
Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS) is associated with high mortality in patients admitted to...
Purpose: Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) have generally been considered incapable of modulating ...
Systemic inflammation is a hallmark of trauma, sepsis and various severe infectious diseases. Severe...
Contains fulltext : 88555.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Neutrophils pl...
A disproportional innate immune response underlies the pathogenesis of organ failure and sepsis as s...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Abstract Context: Immune dysfunction following major traumatic injury is complex and strongly assoc...
Critically ill post-surgical, post-trauma and/or septic patients are characterised by severe inflamm...
Critically ill post-surgical, post-trauma and/or septic patients are characterised by severe inflamm...
Neutrophils are main players in the effector phase of the host defense against micro-organisms and h...
Abstract Context: Immune dysfunction following major traumatic injury is complex and strongly assoc...
Item does not contain fulltextThe investigation of the trauma-induced innate immune responses is ham...
Purpose: To study the effects of systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) on polymorhonuclear ...
Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS) is associated with high mortality in patients admitted to...
Purpose: Polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) have generally been considered incapable of modulating ...
Systemic inflammation is a hallmark of trauma, sepsis and various severe infectious diseases. Severe...
Contains fulltext : 88555.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Neutrophils pl...
A disproportional innate immune response underlies the pathogenesis of organ failure and sepsis as s...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Objective: The immune response in sepsis shows a bimodal pattern consisting of an early, frequently ...
Abstract Context: Immune dysfunction following major traumatic injury is complex and strongly assoc...
Critically ill post-surgical, post-trauma and/or septic patients are characterised by severe inflamm...
Critically ill post-surgical, post-trauma and/or septic patients are characterised by severe inflamm...
Neutrophils are main players in the effector phase of the host defense against micro-organisms and h...
Abstract Context: Immune dysfunction following major traumatic injury is complex and strongly assoc...
Item does not contain fulltextThe investigation of the trauma-induced innate immune responses is ham...