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Monday, February 4, 2008

Effects of Ethanol on Cytokine Production After Surgery in a Murine Model of Gram-Negative Pneumonia
Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research 32 (2), 331–338

Both alcohol abuse and surgery have been shown to impair immune function. The frequency of postoperative infectious complications is 2- to 5-fold increased in long-term alcoholic patients, leading to prolonged hospital stay. Following surgery, an increase in interleukin (IL)-6 has been shown to be associated with increased tissue injury and interleukin 1-(IL-10) is known to represent an anti-inflammatory signal.

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that several days of excess alcohol consumption results in more pronounced immunosuppression. We assume that alcoholic animals show increased levels of IL-10 in response to infection and increased IL-6 due to a more pronounced lung pathology.

Alcohol-exposed mice exhibited a worsened clinical appearance. The histological assessment demonstrated a distinct deterioration of the pulmonary structure in alcohol-treated animals. In the lung, IL-6 and IL-10 was significantly increased in alcohol-exposed infected mice compared to saline-treated infected mice. The clinical score correlated significantly with IL-6 (r = 0.71; p <>r = 0.64; p <>

Ethanol treatment in this surgical model led to a more severe pulmonary infection with K. pneumoniae which was associated with more tissue destruction and increased levels of IL-6 and IL-10 and a worsened clinical score.

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