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      Effects of thoracic nerve block on perioperative lung injury, immune function, and recovery after thoracic surgery

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          Abstract

          Background

          To investigate the effects of thoracic nerve block on perioperative lung injury, immune function, and recovery after thoracic surgery

          Methods

          A total of 120 patients with lung cancer were randomly allocated into three groups: general anesthesia group (GAL group), thoracic paravertebral nerve block (TPVB) combined with general anesthesia (TPL group), and TPVB (with paravertebral dexmedetomidine) combined with general anesthesia group (TDL group); 120 patients with esophageal cancer were randomly allocated into three groups: general anesthesia group (GAE group), TPVB combined with general anesthesia group (TPE group), and thoracic epidural block combined with general anesthesia group (TEE group). Lung injury and immune function were evaluated. Hemodynamic changes, early recovery in post‐anesthesia care unit, pain, 6‐min walking test (6MWT), drug consumption, and life quality were also observed. The duration in the PACU of patients was retrospectively analyzed. The effect of dexmedetomidine on lung injury was established in vitro.

          Results

          The lung injury, including injury scores, apoptosis, and inflammation, were decreased in the TDL group compared with the GAL group and TPL group. The ratio of CD4 +/CD8 + cells at the end of surgery was higher in the TPE group than in the GAE group. More stable hemodynamic was found in TPL group and TPE group. Acute pain was alleviated and the 6MWT was enhanced by TPVB with or without dexmedetomidine. Anesthetic consumption was decreased by thoracic nerve block.

          Conclusions

          Thoracic nerve block, especially TPVB with or without paravertebral dexmedetomidine, can enhance recovery after thoracic surgery. Protection against independent lung injury and cellular immune dysfunction may be a potential mechanism.

          Abstract

          Thoracic paravertebral nerve block with or without dexmedetomidine protects against the lung injury and immune dysfunction during pneumonectomy and esophagectomy.

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          Most cited references19

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          Thoracic paravertebral block.

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            A Prospective Study of Chronic Pain after Thoracic Surgery.

            The goal of this study was to detect the predictors of chronic pain at 6 months after thoracic surgery from a comprehensive evaluation of demographic, psychosocial, and surgical factors.
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              The actin cytoskeleton participates in the early events of autophagosome formation upon starvation induced autophagy.

              Autophagy is a process by which cytoplasmic material is sequestered in a double-membrane vesicle destined for degradation. Nutrient deprivation stimulates the pathway and the number of autophagosomes in the cell increases in response to such stimulus. In the current report we have demonstrated that actin is necessary for starvation-mediated autophagy. When the actin cytoskeleton is depolymerized, the increase in autophagic vacuoles in response to the starvation stimulus was abolished without affecting maturation of remaining autophagosomes. In addition, actin filaments colocalized with ATG14, BECN1/Beclin1 and PtdIns3P-rich structures, and some of them have a typical omegasome shape stained with the double FYVE domain or ZFYVE1/DFCP1. In contrast, no major colocalization between actin and ULK1, ULK2, ATG5 or MAP1LC3/LC3 was observed. Taken together, our data indicate that actin has a role at very early stages of autophagosome formation linked to the PtdIns3P generation step. In addition, we have found that two members of the Rho family of proteins, RHOA and RAC1 have a regulatory function on starvation-mediated autophagy, but with opposite roles. Indeed, RHOA has an activatory role whereas Rac has an inhibitory one. We have also found that inhibition of the RHOA effector ROCK impaired the starvation-mediated autophagic response. We propose that actin participates in the initial membrane remodeling stage when cells require an enhanced rate of autophagosome formation, and this actin function would be tightly regulated by different members of the Rho family.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                gujianqinzz@163.com
                jqzhang@henu.edu.cn
                Journal
                Clin Transl Med
                Clin Transl Med
                10.1002/(ISSN)2001-1326
                CTM2
                Clinical and Translational Medicine
                John Wiley and Sons Inc. (Hoboken )
                2001-1326
                08 July 2020
                July 2020
                : 10
                : 3 ( doiID: 10.1002/ctm2.v10.3 )
                : e38
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ] Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine Center for Clinical Single Cell Biomedicine Henan Provincial People's Hospital People's Hospital of Zhengzhou University Zhengzhou Henan P. R. China
                [ 2 ] Department of General Medicine Henan Provincial People's Hospital People's Hospital of Zhengzhou University Zhengzhou Henan P. R. China
                Author notes
                [*] [* ] Correspondence

                Jianqin Gu and Jiaqiang Zhang, No. 7, Weiwu Road, Zhengzhou City, Henan Province, China.

                Email: jqzhang@ 123456henu.edu.cn , gujianqinzz@ 123456163.com

                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7946-9810
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1367-9644
                Article
                CTM238
                10.1002/ctm2.38
                7418816
                32639645
                3f7ee357-0e40-41db-9cbc-a4a1401d9d71
                © 2020 The Authors. Clinical and Translational Medicine published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Shanghai Institute of Clinical Bioinformatics

                This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 26 March 2020
                : 26 April 2020
                : 26 April 2020
                Page count
                Figures: 14, Tables: 2, Pages: 17, Words: 6927
                Funding
                Funded by: Provincial‐Ministry Co‐construction Project of Medical Science and Technology Project of Henan Province
                Award ID: SB201901091
                Funded by: Henan provincial science and technology research project
                Award ID: 2018020844
                Categories
                Research Article
                Research Articles
                Custom metadata
                2.0
                July 2020
                Converter:WILEY_ML3GV2_TO_JATSPMC version:5.8.6 mode:remove_FC converted:11.08.2020

                Medicine
                dexmedetomidine,immune,lung injury,paravertebral,recovery,thoracic surgery
                Medicine
                dexmedetomidine, immune, lung injury, paravertebral, recovery, thoracic surgery

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