Abstract

The occurrence of incidents involving radiation-combined burn injuries (RCBI) poses a significant risk to public health. Understanding the immunological and physiological responses associated with such injuries is crucial for developing care triage to counter the mortality that occurs due to the synergistic effects of radiation and burn injuries. The core focus of this narrative review lies in unraveling the immune response against RCBI. Langerhans cells, mast cells, keratinocytes, and fibroblasts, which induce innate immunity, have been explored for their response to radiation, burns, and combined injuries. In the case of adaptive immune response, exploring behavioral changes in T regulatory (Treg) cells, T helper cells (Th1, Th2, and Th17), and immunoglobulin results in delayed healing compared to burn and radiation injury. The review also includes the function of complement system components such as neutrophils, acute phase proteins (CRP, C3, and C5), and cytokines for their role in RCBI. Combined insults resulting in a reduction in the cell population of immune cells display variation in response based on radiation doses, burn injury types, and their intrinsic radiosensitivity. The lack of approved countermeasures against RCBI poses a significant challenge. Drug repurposing might help to balance immune cell alteration, resulting in fast recovery and decreasing mortality, which gives it clinical significance for its implication on the site of such incidence. However, the exact immune response in RCBI remains insufficiently explored in pre-clinical and clinical stages, which might be due to the non-availability of in vitro models, standard animal models, or human subjects, warranting further research.

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