Objective: To develop a novel polytrauma model that better recapitulates the immunologic response of the severely injured patient by combining long-bone fracture, muscle tissue damage, and cecectomy with hemorrhagic shock, resulting in an equivalent Injury Severity Score of greater than 15. We compared this new polytrauma/shock model to historically used murine trauma-hemorrhage models.
Design: Pre-clinical controlled in vivo laboratory study.
Setting: Laboratory of Inflammation Biology and Surgical Science.
Subjects: Six- to 10-week-old C57BL/6 (B6) mice.
Interventions: Mice underwent 90 minutes of shock (mean arterial pressure 30 mm Hg) and resuscitation via femoral artery cannulation followed by laparotomy (trauma-hemorrhage), hemorrhage with laparotomy and femur fracture, or laparotomy with cecetomy and femur fracture with muscle tissue damage (polytrauma). Mice were euthanized at 2 hours, 1 day, and 3 days postinjury.
Measurements and main results: The spleen, bone marrow, blood, and serum were collected from mice for analysis at the above time points. None of the models were lethal. Mice undergoing polytrauma exhibited a more robust inflammatory response with significant elevations in cytokine/chemokine concentrations when compared with traditional models. Polytrauma was the only model to induce neutrophilia (Ly6G (+)CD11b(+) cells) on days 1 and 3 (p<0.05). Polytrauma, as compared to trauma-hemorrhage and hemorrhage with laparotomy and femur fracture, induced a loss of circulating CD4(+) T cell with simultaneous increased cell activation (CD69(+) and CD25(+)), similar to human trauma. There was a prolonged loss of major histocompatibility complex class II expression on monocytes in the polytrauma model (p<0.05). Results were confirmed by genome-wide expression analysis that revealed a greater magnitude and duration of blood leukocyte gene expression changes in the polytrauma model than the trauma-hemorrhage and sham models.
Conclusions: This novel polytrauma model better replicates the human leukocyte, cytokine, and overall inflammatory response following injury and hemorrhagic shock.