Post-burn temporal dynamics of blood plasma histamine during the initial 6 days from injury

Int J Burns Trauma. 2020 Jun 15;10(3):68-75. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Background: Burn injuries can induce distinct, systemic inflammatory and immunological responses which occur acutely up to 72 hrs or chronically after 24 hrs. Previously published literature showed a dramatic increase in whole blood histamine values within 24 hrs of a thermal injury. However, the data is limited due to infrequent monitoring, resulting in statistically insignificant findings. The goal of this study was to determine localized histamine fluctuations for 6 consecutive days in a successive group of patients admitted immediately after a burn.

Method: Using blood plasma from 7 patients (average total burn surface area 24.7%), we examined histamine within an average 4.1 (± 0.3) hrs from burn injury, by means of a monoclonal-based competitive binding enzyme immunoassay. Histamine values were normalized to patient baselines prior to determining overall averages. Patient vitals and electrolyte values were extracted from the electronic health record. A two-tailed student t-test was used to compare values with p-value ≤ 0.05 considered statistically significant using statistical software R.

Results: The histamine values were significantly higher than patient baseline values up to 48 hrs (p-value ≤ 0.05), followed by a return to baseline values from approximately 3 days post-injury. Heart rates were within normal values up until 72 hrs. Hematocrit and hemoglobin began within normal values, dropped at 72 hrs, and reduced significantly from 96 hrs post-injury. The electrolyte calcium began within the normal range, and then was significantly less than the baseline value from 96 hrs post-injury.

Conclusions: We have shown a distinct and significant increase in histamine plasma levels within 48 hrs after a moderate burn injury.

Keywords: Burn; histamine; immunological response; inflammatory; mediator.