Long-term skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with hypermetabolism in severely burned children

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Abstract

The long-term impact of burn trauma on skeletal muscle bioenergetics remains unknown. Here, the authors determined respiratory capacity and function of skeletal muscle mitochondria in healthy individuals and in burn victims for up to 2 years postinjury. Biopsies were collected from the m. vastus lateralis of 16 healthy men (26 ± 4 years) and 69 children (8 ± 5 years) with burns encompassing ≥30% of their total BSA. Seventy-nine biopsies were collected from cohorts of burn victims at 2 weeks (n = 18), 6 months (n = 18), 12 months (n = 25), and 24 months (n = 18) postburn. Hypermetabolism was determined by the difference in predicted and measured metabolic rate. Mitochondrial respiration was determined in saponin-permeabilized myofiber bundles. Outcomes were modeled by analysis of variance, with differences in groups assessed by Tukey-adjusted contrasts. Burn patients were hypermetabolic for up to 2 years postinjury. Coupled mitochondrial respiration was lower at 2 weeks (17 [8] pmol/sec/mg; P

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Porter, C., Herndon, D. N., Børsheim, E., Bhattarai, N., Chao, T., Reidy, P. T., … Sidossis, L. S. (2016). Long-term skeletal muscle mitochondrial dysfunction is associated with hypermetabolism in severely burned children. Journal of Burn Care and Research, 37(1), 53–63. https://doi.org/10.1097/BCR.0000000000000308

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