Correlation between the serum and tissue levels of oxidative stress markers and the extent of inflammation in acute appendicitis

Authors

  • Ersin Gürkan Dumlu Atatürk Training and Research Hospital; Department of General Surgery
  • Mehmet Tokaç Atatürk Training and Research Hospital; Department of General Surgery
  • Birkan Bozkurt Atatürk Training and Research Hospital; Department of General Surgery
  • Murat Baki Yildirim Atatürk Training and Research Hospital; Department of General Surgery
  • Merve Ergin Atatürk Training and Research Hospital; Department of Biochemistry
  • Abdussamed Yalçin Yildirim Beyazit University Faculty of Medicine; Department of General Surgery
  • Mehmet Kiliç Yildirim Beyazit University Faculty of Medicine; Department of General Surgery

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2014(10)05

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the serum and tissue levels of markers of impaired oxidative metabolism and correlate these levels with the histopathology and Alvarado score of acute appendicitis patients. METHOD: Sixty-five acute appendicitis patients (mean age, 31.4±12.06 years; male/female, 30/35) and 30 healthy control subjects were studied. The Alvarado score was recorded. Serum samples were obtained before surgery and 12 hours postoperatively to examine the total antioxidant status, total oxidant status, paraoxonase, stimulated paraoxonase, arylesterase, catalase, myeloperoxidase, ceruloplasmin, oxidative stress markers (advanced oxidized protein products and total thiol level) and ischemia-modified albumin. Surgical specimens were also evaluated. RESULTS: The diagnoses were acute appendicitis (n = 37), perforated appendicitis (n = 8), phlegmonous appendicitis (n = 12), perforated+phlegmonous appendicitis (n = 4), or no appendicitis (n = 4). The Alvarado score of the acute appendicitis group was significantly lower than that of the perforated+phlegmonous appendicitis group (p = 0.004). The serum total antioxidant status, total thiol level, advanced oxidized protein products, total oxidant status, catalase, arylesterase, and ischemia-modified albumin levels were significantly different between the acute appendicitis and control groups. There was no correlation between the pathological extent of acute appendicitis and the tissue levels of the markers; additionally, there was no correlation between the tissue and serum levels of any of the parameters. CONCLUSIONS: The imbalance of oxidant/antioxidant systems plays a role in the pathogenesis acute appendicitis. The Alvarado score can successfully predict the presence and extent of acute appendicitis.

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Published

2014-12-01

Issue

Section

Clinical Sciences

How to Cite

Correlation between the serum and tissue levels of oxidative stress markers and the extent of inflammation in acute appendicitis . (2014). Clinics, 69(10), 677-682. https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2014(10)05