Immune-Inflammatory, Metabolic, Oxidative, and Nitrosative Stress Biomarkers Predict Acute Ischemic Stroke and Short-Term Outcome

被引:0
作者
Daniela Frizon Alfieri
Marcio Francisco Lehmann
Tamires Flauzino
Maria Caroline Martins de Araújo
Nicolas Pivoto
Rafaele Maria Tirolla
Andrea Name Colado Simão
Michael Maes
Edna Maria Vissoci Reiche
机构
[1] State University of Londrina,Laboratory of Research in Applied Immunology, Health Sciences Center
[2] State University of Londrina,Department of Clinical Surgery, Health Sciences Center, Neurosurgery Service of the University Hospital
[3] University Hospital of State University of Londrina,Neurology Postgraduate Program
[4] State University of Londrina,Department of Pathology, Clinical Analysis, and Toxicology, Health Sciences Center
[5] Chulalongkorn University,Department Psychiatry
[6] Deakin University,IMPACT Strategic Research Centre, School of Medicine
来源
Neurotoxicity Research | 2020年 / 38卷
关键词
Ischemic stroke; Inflammatory biomarkers; Oxidative stress; IL-6; Modified Rankin scale; Short-term outcome;
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学科分类号
摘要
Immune-inflammatory, metabolic, oxidative, and nitrosative stress (IMO&NS) pathways and, consequently, neurotoxicity are involved in acute ischemic stroke (IS). The simultaneous assessment of multiple IMO&NS biomarkers may be useful to predict IS and its prognosis. The aim of this study was to identify the IMO&NS biomarkers, which predict short-term IS outcome. The study included 176 IS patients and 176 healthy controls. Modified Rankin scale (mRS) was applied within 8 h after IS (baseline) and 3 months later (endpoint). Blood samples were obtained within 24 h after hospital admission. IS was associated with increased white blood cell (WBC) counts, high sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), interleukin (IL-6), lipid hydroperoxides (LOOHs), nitric oxide metabolites (NOx), homocysteine, ferritin, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), glucose, insulin, and lowered iron, 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D], total cholesterol, and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. We found that 89.4% of the IS patients may be correctly classified using the cumulative effects of male sex, systolic blood pressure (SBP), glucose, NOx, LOOH, 25(OH)D, IL-6, and WBC with sensitivity of 86.2% and specificity of 93.0%. Moreover, increased baseline disability (mRS ≥ 3) was associated with increased ferritin, IL-6, hsCRP, WBC, ESR, and glucose. We found that 25.0% of the variance in the 3-month endpoint (mRS) was explained by the regression on glucose, ESR, age (all positively), and HDL-cholesterol, and 25(OH)D (both negatively). These results show that the cumulative effects of IMO&NS biomarkers are associated with IS and predict a poor outcome at 3-month follow-up.
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页码:330 / 343
页数:13
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