The Inflammatory Response to Surgery





Introduction


Tissue damage after surgery triggers a complex inflammatory response termed sterile inflammation characterized by the release of intracellular molecules into the extracellular environment leading to receptor-mediated immune signaling cascades. A key feature of this inflammatory response involves removing necrotic cells and launching a program of tissue repair. Patients may not only respond differently to a similar sterile insult because of genetic differences, but also as a consequence of preexisting disease that can substantially modify the inflammatory phenotype. The presence of comorbid diseases frequently fuels an established dysregulated inflammatory response, which contributes to organ injury and immunosuppression. Postoperative complications, including (subclinical) organ dysfunction and infection, increase morbidity and mortality following surgery, even after discharge from hospital. Immune alterations are not only the result of direct tissue injury but are also influenced by perioperative medications and interventions. This chapter will discuss the broad current understanding of the immune response to tissue damage, the interaction of this response with comorbid diseases, and clinical factors that influence perioperative inflammation.


Defining Acute Systemic Inflammation After Surgery


Although the acute systemic inflammatory response is widely referred to, defining it objectively in the modern perioperative era is rather elusive. Consensus definitions are lacking, in contrast to sepsis. First described by Sir David Cuthbertson, the classic textbook response entails a biphasic immune, inflammatory, and metabolic response to injury. The first ebb phase, as coined by Cuthbertson, involves peripheral vasoconstriction, concomitant hypothermia, and shunting of blood and substrates to vital organs. A transition then occurs (termed flow by Cuthbertson), with a hypermetabolic phase ensuing. In the modern perioperative setting, these classic characteristics are rather less distinct for several reasons. First, many of the cardiometabolic features following trauma/surgery have been derived from critical illness, chiefly because these measurements are more attainable in this patient population. Despite significant morbidity in noncritically ill surgical patients, it is not clear as to whether this classic temporal pattern occurs in other patients—particularly in the modern era of multimorbidity, anesthesia, and surgery. Second, various clinical measures are nonspecific (e.g., heart rate, temperature), and are frequently unhelpful in convincingly differentiating between the systemic inflammatory response syndrome and alternative pathophysiologic/nonpathologic etiologies. Third, the interaction between common (treated) chronic comorbidity and acute systemic inflammation is poorly defined. Fourth, the nonspecificity of various commonly used inflammatory biomarkers cannot distinguish easily between sterile inflammation and alternative triggers of the inflammatory response. Table 2.1 summarizes common clinically used physiologic and biochemical markers for systemic inflammation after surgery.



Table 2.1

Clinical and biochemical measures of systemic inflammation after surgery.





































Type Marker Description Associations References
Clinical Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) SIRS diagnosed if 2 + criteria are met without evidence of an infectious source:



  • Temperature < 36°C (96.8°F) or > 38°C (100.4°F);



  • Heart rate > 90 min −1 ;



  • Respiratory rate > 20 min −1 or P a CO 2 < 4.3 kPa;



  • White cell count < 4 × 10 9 L −1 or > 12 × 10 9 L −1 or > 10% immature neutrophilic bands.

Length of duration of SIRS associated with increased mortality and complication rate after gastrointestinal and vascular surgery and trauma. Haga et al. Shepherd et al.
Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) Combined total of scores (0-4) in each of six organ systems (nervous, respiratory, cardiovascular, hepatic, renal, and coagulation). Increasing score associated with increased mortality after elective gastrointestinal and cardiac surgery. Bota et al.
Biochemical Neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) The ratio of neutrophils to lymphocytes in blood. Increased ratio associated with adverse events in cardiac, vascular, gastrointestinal, and orthopedic surgery. Malietzis et al.
C-reactive protein Acute phase protein synthesized in the liver and produced largely in response to interleukin-6. Increased levels correlated with the degree of tissue trauma caused by orthopedic surgery and with anastomotic leak rate after upper gastrointestinal resection. Rettig et al.
Albumin Family of abundant globular proteins representing the majority of protein present in plasma. Hypoalbuminemia associated with increased rates of wound infection, need for further surgery, and respiratory complications. Neumayer et al.

Key references pertaining to the perioperative/trauma population are cited.


Where It All Starts: Cellular Origins of Surgical Inflammation


The activation of the host response to sterile inflammation is, unsurprisingly, triggered directly by cellular injury as a result of surgery. Surgical tissue injury shares many similarities with the immune response to infectious pathogens. Upon tissue injury, loss of plasma membrane integrity and cell death (necrosis) leads to the release of danger-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) into the extracellular environment ( Fig. 2.1 ). Pattern recognition receptors (PRRs), including highly conserved Toll-like receptors (TLRs), are expressed on a wide range of immune and nonimmune (epithelial, endothelial and fibroblasts) cells. PRRs recognize both pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and DAMPs (also known as alarmins) following tissue injury. Thus host innate immune surveillance monitors endogenous (self) markers of tissue damage as well as nonself antigens, such as bacterial infection—a process known as the “danger hypothesis.” Receptors and downstream signaling pathways common to both sterile and pathogenic stimuli, such as nuclear factor-ĸβ and mitogen-activated protein kinase, lead to similar patterns of cytokine release and cellular activation. A diverse array of stimuli synonymous with surgical tissue trauma activate the ubiquitous NLRP3 inflammasome, including multiple microbial products, endogenous molecules, and particulate matter. The biochemical function of inflammasomes is to activate caspase-1, which leads to the maturation and release of interleukin 1β (IL-1β) and IL-18, and induction of pyroptosis (a form of cell death) fueling the release of other inflammatory mediators. Human monocytes (unlike tissue resident macrophages) can release mature IL-1β in response to TLR ligands alone, but most microbial stimuli appear to prime the NLRP3 inflammasome for activation. Clinically, sterile and pathogenic inflammatory responses are frequently indistinguishable. DAMPs implicated in generating inflammation and organ dysfunction after surgery ( Table 2.2 ) include mitochondrial DNA, which activate innate inflammation via TRLs.




Fig. 2.1


An overview of the molecular, cellular, and physiologic responses to tissue injury leading to organ dysfunction. Both surgery and trauma are characterized by tissue damage that disrupts cellular integrity and releases intracellular contents into the extracellular space. The release of certain intracellular components (DAMPs) can be detected by the host via pattern recognition receptors. The ligation of PRRs results in cytokine release as the body attempts to amplify danger signals that initiate protection and repair mechanisms. Cytokine production has direct cellular effects but also on the endocrine and autonomic nervous systems. Cytokine production is further promoted iatrogenically through the administration of common perioperative medications and blood transfusion. ATP , Adenosine triphosphate; DAMP , damage-associated molecular pattern; HMGB1 , high mobility group box 1 protein; mtDNA , mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid; PRR , pattern recognition receptor; ROS , reactive oxygen species; TLR , Toll-like receptor.


Table 2.2

Damage-associated molecular patterns with potential roles in organ dysfunction after surgery.








































Molecule Physiologic function Location Receptor Reference
HMGB1 Chromatin regulation Nucleus of immune cells TLR4 Andersson et al.
Histones Nucleosome structure Nucleus TLR2/4/9 and NLRP3 Silk et al.
Mitochondrial DNA Mitochondrial genome Mitochondria TLR9 / NLRP3 Zhang et al.
ATP Cellular energy source Mitochondria P2RX7 / NLRP3 Gombault et al.
Uric acid Byproduct of purine metabolism Cytoplasm NLRP3 Hughes and O’Neill

ATP, Adenosine triphosphate; HMGB1, high-mobility group box 1 protein; NLRP3, NACHT, LRR and PYD domains containing protein 3 inflammasome; P2RX7, P2X purinoreceptor 7 ; TLR , Toll-like receptor.


PAMPs may also Contribute to Systemic Inflammation After Surgery


TLRs were first characterized for their recognition of PAMPs derived from microbial organisms. Gut microbes may also contribute to systemic inflammation following surgery, particularly when hypoperfusion of the gastrointestinal tract occurs as a result of hypovolemia. Breakdown of the epithelial mucosa may promote the release of enterically derived bacterial endotoxin—termed bacterial translocation. Gram-negative bacteria also activate the NLRP3 inflammasome through the transport of lipopolysaccharide into the cell, which activates caspase-11 and release of IL-1β. In patients, endogenous antibodies to endotoxin appear to be associated with protection from endotoxin-mediated toxicity. Bacterial infection is also an early risk, as features of immunosuppression appear rapidly within hours of surgery. The cellular features of the immunosuppressive response include a rapid decrease in monocyte human leucocyte antigen-DR (HLA-DR) expression and an expansion of myeloid-derived suppressor-like cells that impair adaptive immune responses. Both of these features persist for several days and are associated with postoperative infection and delayed recovery. The underlying mechanism is likely to be multifactorial but may be partially attributed to high levels of circulating catecholamines.


Systemic Processes Triggered by DAMPs/PAMPs


The onset of inflammation heralds a chain of events that in many patients results in organ dysfunction, much of which is subclinical. Typically, different morbidities cluster, as reflected by various clinical measures of subclinical organ dysfunction. For example, many clinicians would overlook a decline in serum albumin that occurs after the vast majority of surgery types, yet there are compelling adverse clinical outcomes linked to this phenomenon that are driven by pivotal inflammatory mechanisms, including endothelial damage. The release of DAMPs triggers a stereotypical response characterized by a dramatic change in circulating blood leukocyte subsets, following the peripheral redistribution of white blood cells to sites of injury and/or lymph nodes. For example, a striking feature of this early phase is a typical doubling of the number of neutrophils in the blood. This process is driven, in part, by autonomic and neuroendocrine activation. Given the changing landscape of modern surgery, both in terms of surgical techniques and increasingly physiologically challenging patients with multiple comorbidities, the classic stress/inflammatory response, as discussed before, is likely to be a gross oversimplification of the broad (rather classic) descriptions that follow.


Autonomic Changes


Profound changes in autonomic function accompany surgery, even in the absence of shock. In part, this is triggered by inflammatory mediators that are sensed by afferent nerves hardwired to detect inflammatory mediators. In concert with this, the inevitable hemodynamic changes that follow both general and regional anesthesia challenge the arterial baroreflex mechanism, which buffers acute fluctuations in blood pressure. In health, small increases in blood pressure result in increased parasympathetic activity that, via the vagus nerve, slows the heart. Conversely, falls in arterial blood pressure lead to central neural activation of the sympathetic nervous system and consequent catecholamine release (epinephrine and norepinephrine). However, reduced baroreceptor sensitivity is common (e.g., in patients with chronic hypertension) and associated with excess morbidity. Stereotypical autonomic features of surgery are activation of the sympathetic, yet relative loss of parasympathetic, neural activity. Heightened sympathetic activity leads to increased release of catecholamines that spill over into the circulation. Concomitantly, the neuroendocrine release of vasopressin and angiotensin, among other neurohormones beyond the scope of this short introduction, occurs to counteract relative, redistributive hypovolemia. Inflammatory mediators may also directly trigger neuroendocrine activation, acting via areas of the brain devoid of the blood barrier. Preexisting autonomic dysfunction is common in many patients prior to surgery and likely to exacerbate the early features of the inflammatory response through both cardiovascular and noncardiovascular mechanisms.


Neuroendocrine Response


Shortly after tissue trauma/surgery, increased production and secretion of catecholamines, antidiuretic hormone (vasopressin), cortisol, insulin, glucagon, and growth hormone occur, leading to a catabolic, relatively hypermetabolic, inflammatory state. The interplay between these neurohormones is complex, with many directly modulating the inflammatory response. For example, cortisol increases blood glucose levels through antagonizing the actions of insulin, while dampening immune responses. Hyperglycemia is common in the postoperative setting in both diabetics and nondiabetics, as a result of catecholamine-, cortisol-, glucagon-, and cytokine-induced antagonism of peripheral insulin activity and impaired peripheral glucose uptake. During acute stress, the rate of hepatic cortisol extraction from the blood is decreased and the plasma half-life of cortisol is increased. Additionally, cortisol-binding globulin concentration and binding affinity for cortisol are decreased, resulting in increased free and biologically active cortisol concentrations, prolonged elevations of which may be deleterious through promotion of immunosuppression.


The metabolic response is characterized by the mobilization of hepatic glycogen stores (glycogenolysis), together with gluconeogenesis fueled by the liver and, to varying degrees, skeletal and visceral muscle breakdown, plus lipolysis and mobilization of free fatty acids. Modern studies of the classic “hypermetabolic” responses are lacking, so some caution is required regarding whether this is typical of patients with comorbidities characterized by established metabolic derangement. However, after major tissue trauma, total body protein and skeletal muscle mass certainly appear to decline, in concert with weight gain chiefly attributable to the accumulation of water. The extent to which the latter is due to iatrogenic reasons is considered elsewhere in this book.


Host Influences on Perioperative Inflammatory Response


Multiple host factors are likely to influence the inflammatory response after surgery that may, in part, explain the heterogenous outcomes observed after noncardiac surgery and the recognition that preoperative factors may be more influential in shaping longer-term outcomes. However, broadly similar pathologic mechanisms are shared between apparently disparate comorbidities, largely because of common cellular pathways mediating much of the inflammatory response driven by tissue trauma. Nevertheless, it is worth bearing in mind that many common comorbidities have not been systematically examined in the perioperative setting. Here, we have focused on the commonest endotypes associated with higher rates of perioperative organ dysfunction and framed this association by focusing on their convergent, dysregulated inflammatory features ( Fig. 2.2 ).


Jun 9, 2021 | Posted by in ANESTHESIA | Comments Off on The Inflammatory Response to Surgery

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