INTESTINAL DAMAGE AND IMMUNE RESPONSE AFTER EXPERIMENTAL BLUNT ABDOMINAL TRAUMA

Erratum

Haussner, Felix; Maitz, Alexander; Rasche, Volker; Hoffmann, Andrea; Braumüller, Sonja; Lupu, Ludmila; Ignatius, Anita; Neff, Thomas A.; Palmer, Annette; Huber-Lang, Markus

Shock | DOI: 10.1097/SHK.0000000000002302 Metrics

In the article appearing on pages 332–340 of the Shock October 2022 issue, an incorrect version of Figure 5 was included. The correct version follows below.

F1FIG. 5:

Blunt AT results in time-dependent changes of biomarkers indicative of gut-blood barrier dysfunction. Plasma levels of mucosal, endothelial, and epithelial barrier damage/dysfunction markers to assess the gut-blood-barrier function. A-C,Mucin-2 (n = 3–6), (D-F) syndecan-1 (G-I) (n = 3-6), and claudin-5 (n = 2-6) were detected in sham and trauma-exposed mice at 2, 6, and 24 hours after AT (at 2.1 cm blaster-abdomen distance). In the early posttraumatic period, AT mice revealed significantly increased plasma concentrations of syndecan-1 (D, E) and claudin-5 (G, H) in comparison with sham animals. Significantly enhanced mucin-2 plasma concentrations were observed at 6 hours after AT (B). Mean ± SEM; **P ≤ 0.01; ***P ≤ 0.001 between sham and AT, Student t test and Mann-Whitney U test.

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