Background: A prospective clinical study was performed to assess the accuracy of procalcitonin in 70 patients with elective colorectal or aortal surgery and to compare it with inflammatory mediators. Also the early prediction of complications and the outcome of these patients was taken into account. Methods: Laboratory variables and cytokine determination were obtained preoperatively, on the day of operation and postoperatively on a daily basis from day 1 to 5, and on days 7 and 10 in the colorectal group and in the aortal surgery group at different times on the operation day after aortal clamping. The main outcome criteria were early recognition of complications and alterations in the production of procalcitonin and cytokines in order to detect severe infective complications. Results: Procalcitonin was closely related to postoperative complications with significantly elevated levels at day 1 after surgery. The plasma concentrations of IL-6 increase on days 1–3 without a difference in the groups, also C-reactive protein demonstrates no differences. Conclusion: Procalcitonin presents itself as a new parameter of infection and sepsis. In the postoperative period PCT seems to be an interesting marker of early prediction of infective complications when high postoperative levels are found. Under routine conditions procalcitonin is a valid reproducible and detectable parameter.
Procalcitonin is a new indicator of infection and sepsis. TNF and IL-6 concentrations always rise after major operations and fall in the absence of infection, indicating operative trauma. Procalcitonin is sensitive in detecting infective complications. Under routine conditions the procalcitonin concentrations seems to be valid, reproducible and detectable.
PCT is an early marker for systemic infectious complications after colorectal surgery with a high negative predictive value. A significant reduction in the rate of postoperative infections in patients with elevated PCT serum concentrations was achieved by means of pre-emptive antibiotic treatment.
There was no correlation between the biallelic LT-alpha (+250 G/A) polymorphism and the outcome of critically ill patients. Genotyping this locus does not seem to be useful in predicting sepsis outcome.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.