Technological advances and shorter rescue times have allowed early and effective resuscitation after trauma and brought attention to the host response to injury. Trauma patients are at risk of progressive organ dysfunction from what appears to be an uncontrolled immune response. The availability of improved techniques of molecular diagnosis has allowed investigation of the role of genetic variations in the inflammatory response to post-traumatic complications and particularly to sepsis. This review examines the current evidence for the genetic predisposition to adverse outcome after trauma. While there is evidence supporting the involvement of different polymorphic variants of genes in determining the post-traumatic course and the development of complications, larger-scale studies are needed to improve the understanding of how genetic variability influences the responses to post-traumatic complications and pharmacotherapy.
Systemic factors are believed to be pivotal for the development of heterotopic ossification in severely-injured patients. In this study, cell cultures of putative target cells (human fibroblastic cells, osteoblastic cells (MG-63), and bone-marrow stromal cells (hBM)) were incubated with serum from ten consecutive polytraumatised patients taken from post-traumatic day 1 to day 21 and with serum from 12 healthy control subjects. The serum from the polytraumatised patients significantly stimulated the proliferation of fibroblasts, MG-63 and of hBM cells. The activity of alkaline phosphatase in MG-63 and hBM cells was significantly decreased when exposed to the serum of the severely-injured patient. After three weeks in 3D cell cultures, matrix production and osteogenic gene expression of hBM cells were equal in the patient and control groups. However, the serum from the polytraumatised patients significantly decreased apoptosis of hBM cells compared with the control serum (4.3% Increased proliferation of osteoblastic cells and reduced apoptosis of osteoprogenitors may be responsible for increased osteogenesis in severely-injured patients.