THE ROLE OF IL-10 IN BURN OUTCOME WITH AND WITHOUT SEPTIC

Authors

  • Lina A.Hassan Department of Laboratory Investigations, Faculty of Science, University of Kufa
  • Ali A.Majeed Department of Laboratory Investigations, Faculty of Science, University of Kufa
  • Mayyada F. Darweesh Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Kufa

Keywords:

burn sepsis, P. aerogenosa, antibiotic sensitivity, IL-10

Abstract

From December 2020 to November 2021, 60 patients entered the Al Sadder hospital in Al Najaf province, Iraq. The patients were divided into two groups: 40 with pseudomonas aeruginosa and 20 uninfected. The purpose of this study was to identify the function of the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin 10 (IL-10) in the pathophysiology of burn injuries. The patients were divided into two groups based on gender (34 males and 26 females) and age (1-61) years. To eliminate patients who had received antibiotic medication during the sample collection. There was a significant difference between males and females in this study, with the highest frequency of patient age being 16-30 (36.6 %), followed by 31-45 (30 %), 1-15 (23.4 %), and 46-61 (10%).All patients divided according to total degree of burn . However, P. aerogenosa antibiotic sensitivity test, in contrast most bacterial isolates exhibited high resistance to Ceftazidime (90%) Tobramycin (80%) and Gentamicin (80%), whereas resistance to Ciprofloxacin (50%) Amikacin (40%) and Pipracillin (70%) was variable finally less resist to TC (20%) and no resistance toward IMP (0 %). The study found that patients with P.aerogenosa infection had a substantially higher mean blood concentration of IL-10 (61.4 ± 11.8) than healthy controls (4.58 ± 0.77), whereas noninfected patients had a concentration of (18.21 ± 3.5 )pg/ml and non-infected patients had a concentration of (4.5 ± 0.06) pg/ml.

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Published

2022-03-13

How to Cite

Lina A.Hassan, Ali A.Majeed, & Mayyada F. Darweesh. (2022). THE ROLE OF IL-10 IN BURN OUTCOME WITH AND WITHOUT SEPTIC. World Bulletin of Public Health, 8, 44-51. Retrieved from https://scholarexpress.net/index.php/wbph/article/view/647

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