Abstract

The mechanism of decreased lymphocyte responsiveness after major surgery is unclear. Because sodium pentobarbital, and intermediately long-acting barbiturate, will reproducibly induce anesthesia in experimental animals, we utilized a canine model to investigate its effect on lymphocyte proliferation induced by the mitogenic lectins erythroagglutinating phytohemagglutinin (E-PHA) and leukoagglutinating phytohemagglutinin (L-PHA). Although no effect was observed at 10 minutes or 1 hour after an anesthetic dose of sodium pentobarbital, after 1 and 3 hours of anesthesia, canine lymphocytes were significantly suppressed, as demonstrated by decreased responsiveness to E-PHA and L-PHA mitogen stimulation. After 3-hours the majority of animals had mitogenesis values of less than 50% of the preanesthetic control values. Recovery, as measured by a return to at least 70% of the preanesthetic mitogenesis value, was noted in the majority of animals at 24, 48, and 72 hours. In order to investigate the machanisms of the in vivo capability of sodium pentobarbital to induce immunosuppression of lymphocyte transformation, in vitro studies were carried out. Sodium pentobarbital was found to significantly inhibit mitogen-induced canine mononuclear cell blastogenesis at anesthetic (1.5 to 3.0 mg%) drug concentrations in vitro. Lymphocytes pretreated with barbiturate and washed prior to plating did not show this inhibiting effect. Our findings suggest that depression of the immune response reported in patients after operation could result from short-acting barbiturates administered during the induction phase of clinical anesthesia. Furthermore, the suppression may involve in vivo metabolism of pentobarbital, hormones or other in vivo factors, since washed lymphocytes from the in vivo but not the in vitro experiments demonstrated suppression. These results indicate that anesthesia may be an important factor in the immunosuppression reported after major surgery.

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