Litcius/Paper detail

Endothelial Responses in Sepsis

Jérémie Joffre, Judith Hellman, Can İnce, Hafid Ait‐Oufella

2020American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine708 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endothelial cells (ECs) are vascular, nonconventional immune cells that play a major role in the systemic response after bacterial infection to limit its dissemination. Triggered by exposure to pathogens, microbial toxins, or endogenous danger signals, EC responses are polymorphous, heterogeneous, and multifaceted. During sepsis, ECs shift toward a proapoptotic, proinflammatory, proadhesive, and procoagulant phenotype. In addition, glycocalyx damage and vascular tone dysfunction impair microcirculatory blood flow, leading to organ injury and, potentially, life-threatening organ failure. This review aims to cover the current understanding of the EC adaptive or maladaptive response to acute inflammation or bacterial infection based on compelling recent basic research and therapeutic clinical trials targeting microvascular and endothelial alterations during septic shock.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSepsisSeptic shockProinflammatory cytokineGlycocalyxInflammationImmunologyImmune systemSystemic inflammationOrgan dysfunctionShock (circulatory)Endothelial dysfunctionEndothelial stem cellEndotheliumVascular toneBiologyCardiologyInternal medicineVasodilationIn vitroBiochemistrySepsis Diagnosis and TreatmentTrauma, Hemostasis, Coagulopathy, ResuscitationRenal function and acid-base balance