Suppressor T-Cell Levels are Unreliable Indicators of the Impaired Immune Response Following Thermal Injury

Abstract
The presence of increased levels of suppressor T cells after thermal injury and their relevance remain controversial. It is unclear whether suppressor T cells are the cause or result of sepsis complicating thermal injury. Spleen cells from a standardized murine burn model and sham burn controls were studied and the relationship between the levels of suppressor cytotoxic T cells (CD8, Lyt-2+), helper T cells (CD4, L3T4+), response to concanavalin A (ConA) and to phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and interleukin-2 (IL-2) production was examined. Mortality following infection via cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) of matched controls was also studied. At day 7 postburn, mean ConA (70 +/- 12% of control) and PHA response (58% +/- 5.2% of controls) and IL-2 production (43% +/- 5.4%) were significantly less than sham burn values (100%; p less than 0.05). However, the mean percentage of cells staining with anti-Lyt-2 and anti-L3T4 (9.1 +/- 0.59 and 13.9 +/- 0.65) was similar to the mean percentage in sham burn animals (9.4 +/- 0.65 and 16.6 +/- 1.1). Furthermore, no significant differences were observed between burned mice and controls in helper (17.3% +/- 1.8% burn vs. 21.2% +/- 1.7% sham) or suppressor cell levels (7.8% +/- 1.2% burn vs. 8.6% +/- 0.7% sham) or helper-suppressor ratios on day 10 postburn. Mortality of 20 litter-matched controls subjected to CLP on day 10 postburn was 90%, which was significantly greater than the sham burn mortality of 20%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)