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Journal of Nippon Medical School

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Does Carboxy-hemoglobin Serve as a Stress-induced Inflammatory Marker Reflecting Surgical Insults?

Atsuhiro Sakamoto1, Kazuhiro Nakanishi1, Shinhiro Takeda2 and Ryo Ogawa1

1Department of Anesthesiology, Nippon Medical School
2Intensive Care Unit, Nippon Medical School


Endogenous carbon monoxide (CO) production has been recently observed to be an index of the inflammatory response, reflecting various insults in critically ill patients. Major surgery is supposed to modulate the production of CO by transcriptional regulation of heme oxygenase (HO). CO is easy to measure as carboxyhemoglobin (CO-Hb) by spectrophotometry; however, whether CO-Hb can be used as an index reflecting surgical insults is unknown. We investigated changes in CO generation during coronary artery bypass graft by measuring CO-Hb concentrations and the expression of HO in circulating blood as well as the expressions of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and interleukin-1β (IL-1β). The expression ratios of heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), TNF-α, and IL-1β significantly increased after surgery, and these values correlated significantly with one another. CO-Hb concentrations significantly increased after surgery; however, many of those values during artificial ventilation with high inspired oxygen fraction were within normal limits. Furthermore, changes in CO-Hb concentrations were small when preoperative values were high. On the whole, CO-Hb concentrations significantly but weakly correlated with the expression ratios of the inflammatory mediators. However, they did not correlate in the patients who showed higher preoperative CO-Hb concentrations. These data indicate that CO-Hb concentrations can, in general, reflect the inflammatory response induced by surgical insult; however, CO-Hb measurement may not be a useful form of clinical monitoring because of the limited degree of changes, the variation of baseline values, and the necessity for the management under fixed conditions.

J Nippon Med Sch 2005; 72: 19-28

Keywords
carbon monoxide, carboxyhemoglobin, heme oxygenase, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β, surgical stress, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction

Correspondence to
Atsuhiro Sakamoto, M.D., Department of Anesthesiology, Nippon Medical School, 1-1-5 Sendagi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8603, Japan
no1-saka@nms.ac.jp

Received, August 24, 2004
Accepted, October 20, 2004