Abstract

BackgroundPostoperative pain management is a critical aspect of patient care. The inflammatory state of the post-sternotomy surgical wound sensitizes nerve endings, causing pain. Unrelieved or improperly managed pain compromises wound healing. Peripheral opioid receptors play a major role in analgesia, particularly under inflammatory conditions where both opioid receptor expression and efficacy are increased. Leukocytic opioid peptides include β-endorphin (END), met-enkephalin (ENK), and dynorphin-A (DYN), with END and ENK being predominant.Methodology/Principal FindingsThis work represents the first study of inflammatory cells collected from post-sternotomy wounds of patients undergoing cardiac surgery including coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Wound fluid (WF) and cells were collected from sternal wounds using a JP Blake drain at 24, 48, and 72 hours post sternum closure. Anti-CD15 staining and flow cytometry revealed that polymorphonuclear neutrophils (PMN) are the predominant cells present in wound fluid collected post-surgery. Compared to peripheral blood (PB) derived PMN, significant increases in CD177+/CD66b+ PMN were observed suggesting activation of wound-site PMN. Such activation was associated with higher levels of opioid peptide expression in PMN derived from WF. Indeed, increased level of opioid peptides in sternal wound environment was noted 72 h post-surgery. We demonstrate that WF contains factors that can significantly induce POMC transcription in human PMNs. IL-10 and IL-4 were abundant in WF and both cytokines significantly induced POMC gene expression suggesting that WF factors such as IL-10 and IL-4 contribute towards increased opioid peptide expression in wound-site PMN.Conclusions/SignificanceThis approach provided a unique opportunity to study the cross-talk between inflammation and opioid peptides in PMN at a sternotomy wound-site. Wound-site PMN exhibited induction of END and ENK. In addition, sternal wound fluid significantly induced END expression in PMN. Taken together, these data constitute first clinical evidence that human wound-site PMNs are direct contributors of opioids at the sternal wound-site.

Highlights

  • An estimated 50–75% of surgical patients suffer from inadequate pain relief [1]

  • Granulocytes were identified as the predominant cell type present in wound fluid (WF) at 48 h post-surgery (Fig. 2B)

  • Data obtained from forward scatter (FS)/side scatter (SS) flow cytometry analysis were confirmed using clinical complete blood count (CBC) enumerating differential count in peripheral blood (PB) and WF samples (Fig. 2C)

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Summary

Introduction

An estimated 50–75% of surgical patients suffer from inadequate pain relief [1]. Pain, following cardiac surgery, may occur at the incision and sternotomy sites, chest tube sites, and vascular harvesting sites [2]. Inadequate postoperative pain control has been associated with compromised outcomes including poor wound healing [1]. Findings from studies of both animal models as well as patients support the involvement of peripheral opioid receptors in analgesia, under inflammatory conditions where both opioid receptor expression and efficacy are increased [5,6]. The opioid peptides expressed in leukocytes include b-endorphin (END), met-enkephalin (ENK), and dynorphin-A, with END and ENK being predominant [6,7,8]. Unrelieved or improperly managed pain compromises wound healing. Peripheral opioid receptors play a major role in analgesia, under inflammatory conditions where both opioid receptor expression and efficacy are increased. Leukocytic opioid peptides include b-endorphin (END), metenkephalin (ENK), and dynorphin-A (DYN), with END and ENK being predominant

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