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The effects of surgery on the activity of neutrophil granule proteins
26
Citations
27
References
1983
Year
InflammationTotal Abdominal HysterectomySerum LysozymeGranulocyteBioanalysisHematologyImmunologyPathologyGastroenterologyHemostasisCytoskeletonSurgeryWound HealingVivo DegranulationClinical ChemistryPhagocyteMedicineNeutrophil Granule Proteins
Activities of the neutrophil granule-associated proteins beta-glucuronidase, lysozyme and vitamin B12 binding protein were measured, serially, in the cells and serum of 10 patients undergoing total abdominal hysterectomy. The neutrophil leucocytosis which followed total abdominal hysterectomy was accompanied by a fall in the intraneutrophilic activities of all three granule-associated proteins. Intraneutrophilic lysozyme activity and intraneutrophilic vitamin B12 binding capacity were maximally reduced within 4 h of surgery and fell to 62 +/- 13% (mean +/- SEM) and 63 +/- 9% of their preoperative levels, respectively. This contrasted with the activity of intraneutrophilic beta-glucuronidase which was not maximally reduced until 24 h post-surgery when a fall to 80 +/- 6% of the preoperative level was observed. By the fifth postoperative day activities of the three intraneutrophilic granule proteins were increasing and approaching those observed preoperatively. Serum lysozyme and plasma unsaturated vitamin B12 binding capacity (UBBC) rose steadily following surgery and were significantly elevated by the fifth postoperative day. It is suggested that activation and in vivo degranulation of circulating neutrophils may be responsible for these changes in activity of neutrophil granule proteins following surgery.
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