Methods: We conducted a prospective study to investigate the response of circulating lymphocytes and their subpopulations in a sample of 28 consecutive cyanotic or acyanotic children undergoing cardiac surgery. Peripheral blood samples were obtained preoperatively, and at 48 hours and three months postoperatively to study total lymphocyte count, T lymphocytes, and T-lymphocyte subsets.
Results: There were no differences between cyanotic and acyanotic cases with regard to T-cell and subset counts before and after surgery (p>0.05). Overall, total lymphocyte count and absolute total T lymphocyte (CD3+) and absolute T helper cell (CD4+) counts decreased significantly within 48 hours after CPB (p<0.05). T suppressor (CD8+) and natural killer cell (NKC) levels also decreased in the early period (p<0.05). These values increased to preoperative values three months after the operation (p<0.05). The CD4/CD8 ratio increased from 1.31 to 1.55 in the early postoperative period (p=0.002); however, it then decreased to 0.93 in the late postoperative period (p=0.001).
Conclusion: Significant decreases in absolute NKC count, total lymphocyte count, total T cells and their subsets in the early period of CPB may be due to an extravasation and/or T-cell activation during and after the operation, predisposing pediatric patients to a higher risk for infections.