DOES BURN WOUND EXCISION AFTER THERMAL INJURY ATTENUATE SUBSEQUENT MACROPHAGE HYPERACTIVITY AND IMMUNOSUPPRESSION?

Abstract
Studies have shown that cell mediated immunity is suppressed markedly following thermal injury. Macrophages and the activation of an inflammatory cascade that includes interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6, tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα) and PGE2 have been implicated as causative factors. Burn wound excision and grafting is a common clinical practice that decreases patient morbidity and mortality. It is not known, however, if the salutary effects of this procedure are related to modulation of macrophage activity post-burn. Therefore, C57BL/6 female mice were subjected to a third-degree scald burn covering 25% of their total body surface area followed by complete excision and allografting of the injury site at 8, 24, or 72 h post-burn. Splenic macrophage function was assessed 7 days post-burn. Thermal injury without burn excision and grafting significantly increased macrophage TNFα, IL-6, nitric oxide, and PGE2 production in response to lipopolysaccharide stimulation, whereas IL-1β production was not increased. Burn wound excision and grafting normalized TNFα production to sham levels, independent of when post-burn the procedure was conducted. In contrast, the elevated production of other inflammatory mediators (IL-1β, IL-6, nitric oxide, PGE2) post-burn was unaffected by burn wound excision and grafting. Moreover, splenic T-lymphocyte proliferation was also suppressed at 7 days post-burn and was not improved by burn wound excision and grafting. These results, therefore, suggest that the beneficial effects of burn wound excision and grafting are likely to be related to the normalization of macrophage TNFα production as well as the maintenance of skin barrier function.