139 Systemic Immune Response in Burn Patients 58. Korn; Bettelli; Oukka; et al. IL-17 and Th17 Cells. Annu. Rev. Immunol. 2009, 27, 485–517. 59. Kim; Rott; Kunkel; et al. Rules of Chemokine Receptor Association with T Cell Polarization in Vivo. J. Clin. Invest. 2001, 108, 1331–1339. 60. Paul; Zhu. How Are TH2-Type Immune Responses Initiated and Amplified? Nat. Rev. Immunol. 2010, 10, 225–235. 61. Rani; Zhang; Schwacha. Burn Wound Γδ T-Cells Support a Th2 and Th17 Immune Response. J. Burn Care Res. 2014, 35, 46–53. 62. Kim; Lang; Xue; et al. The Role of Th-17 Cells and Γδ T-Cells in Modulating the Systemic Inflammatory Response to Severe Burn Injury. Int. J. Mol. Sci. 2017, 18, 758. 63. Choileain; MacConmara; Zang; et al. Enhanced Regulatory T Cell Activity Is an Element of the Host Response to Injury. J. Immunol. 2006, 176, 225–236. 64. Huang; Yao; Dong; et al. Association between Regulatory T Cell Activity and Sepsis and Outcome of Severely Burned Patients: A Prospective, Observational Study. Crit. Care 2010, 14, 1–10. 65. Sikora; Chlebna-Sokół; Andrzejewska; et al. Clinical Evaluation of Proinflammatory Cytokine Inhibitors (STNFR I, STNFR II, IL-1 Ra), Anti-Inflammatory Cytokines (IL-10, IL-13) and Activation of Neutrophils after Burn-Induced Inflammation. Scand. J. Immunol. 2008, 68, 145–152. 66. Jeschke; Chinkes; Finnerty; et al. Pathophysiologic Response to Severe Burn Injury. Ann. Surg. 2008, 248, 387–400. 67. Li; Wei; Yin; et al. The Abnormal Expression of CCR4 and CCR6 on Tregs in Rheumatoid Arthritis. Int. J. Clin. Exp. Med. 2015, 8, 15043–15053. 68. Yang; Shao; Lopez-Pastrana; et al. Pathological Conditions Re-Shape Physiological Tregs into Pathological Tregs. Burn. Trauma 2015, 3, 1–11. 69. Ranasinghe; Eri. Pleiotropic Immune Functions of Chemokine Receptor 6 in Health and Disease. Medicines 2018, 5, 69. 70. Linton; Dorshkind. Age-Related Changes in Lymphocyte Development and Function. Nat. Immunol. 2004, 5, 133–139. 71. Shaw; Goldstein; Montgomery. Age-Dependent Dysregulation of Innate Immunity. Nat. Rev. Immunol. 2013, 13, 875–887. 72. Mair; Hartmann; Mrdjen; et al. The End of Gating? An Introduction to Automated Analysis of High Dimensional Cytometry Data. Eur. J. Immunol. 2016, 46, 34–43. 73. Balk. Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS): Where Did It Come from and Is It Still Relevant Today? Virulence 2014, 5, 20–26. 74. Kotecha; Krutzik; Irish. Web‐Based Analysis and Publication of Flow Cytometry Experiments. Curr. Protoc. Cytom. 2010, 53, 1–40. 4
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTk4NDMw