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<Articles><Article><Journal><PublisherName></PublisherName><JournalTitle>Journal of Diabetes and Metabolic Disorders</JournalTitle><Volume>2</Volume><Issue>0</Issue></Journal><ArticleTitle>PHAGOCYTE RESPIRATORY BURST ACTIVITY IN PATIENTS WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES, USING PMA AND FMLP STIMULI.</ArticleTitle><FirstPage>36</FirstPage><LastPage>36</LastPage><AuthorList><Author><FirstName>Bagher</FirstName><LastName>LARIJANI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Narima</FirstName><LastName>MOSSAFA</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Peyman</FirstName><LastName>SHOUSHTARIZADEH</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Mehdi</FirstName><LastName>NOURAI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Ebrahim</FirstName><LastName>JAVADI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Ali-Reza</FirstName><LastName>SHAFAEI</LastName></Author><Author><FirstName>Ali-Reza</FirstName><LastName>VASSIGH</LastName></Author></AuthorList><History><PubDate PubStatus="received"><Year>2015</Year><Month>10</Month><Day>05</Day></PubDate></History><Abstract>Background: Diabetes is a hidden epidemic and the most common metabolic disorder in the world.&amp;nbsp; Immune dysfunction (cellular and humoural) is one of the consequences of diabetes, including defects of phagocyte function, notably in chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and killing.&amp;nbsp; Results of studies on phagocyte respiratory burst activity, however, have been contradictory.&amp;nbsp; We studied the respiratory burst of peripheral blood neutrophils and monocytes separately in response to formyl-met-leu-phe (fmlp) and phorbol-12,13-myristate acetate (PMA).
Methods: 36 patients with type 2 diabetes (mean age 53&amp;plusmn;7 years) and 20 healthy controls (mean age 50&amp;plusmn;5 years) each provided a 15ml blood sample.&amp;nbsp; Peripheral blood neutrophils and monocytes were separated and purified (&amp;gt;95%) using specific density gradients and short-term culture.&amp;nbsp; We then separately assessed respiratory burst activity in response to fmlp and PMA by the semi-quantitative nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) test.
Results: Following stimulation with PMA, diabetic neutrophils showed reduced respiratory burst activity compared with normal neutrophils (p=0.097). &amp;nbsp;Following stimulation with fmlp, too, diabetic neutrophils showed reduced respiratory burst activity compared with normal neutrophils, which this time was statistically significant (p=0.027).&amp;nbsp; There was no difference between diabetic and normal subjects with regards to monocyte response to either fmlp or PMA.
Conclusion: It appears that the diminished response and reduced effectiveness of the phagocyte system in people with diabetes can facilitate the onset, exacerbation, and persistence of infection.</Abstract><web_url>https://jdmd.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jdmd/article/view/36</web_url></Article></Articles>
