The links between systemic inflammation, endothelial dysfunction and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress in pre-clinical models make it an interesting potential therapeutic target, but there are no data describing SRE during severe inflammation in humans . For an approach to the study of SRE in humans in a situation of systemic inflammation, the analysis of patients benefiting from an extra-corporeal circulation for a programmed cardiac surgery would allow a study under well described conditions of inflammation, standardized, with the possibility for each patient to be his own witness. Compared to a situation of secondary inflammation (sepsis, acute pancreatitis, trauma ...) the analysis of the patients under CEC allows more precise description of the kinetics of the activation of the SRE because the beginning of the inflammatory mechanism is known with precision.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
53
The study will enroll patients having a planned cardiac surgery under extracorporeal circulation (CEC)
ROUEN Hospital University
Rouen, France
Study of the variation of a marker of endoplasmic reticulum stress, between the pre- extracorporeal circulation (CEC) sample and the sample taken 2 hours after the release of extracorporeal circulation
ELISA technique (comparison of protein levels) + quantitative RT-PCR (comparison of normalized mRNA expression concentrations relative to a control gene).
Time frame: 2 hours after the release of extracorporeal circulation
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