Literature DB >> 12383613

The meaning of microbial exposure, infection, colonisation, and disease in clinical practice.

Liise-anne Pirofski1, Arturo Casadevall.   

Abstract

The basic lexicon of infectious diseases includes the terms exposure, infection, colonisation, and disease, which are used to describe the clinical states in which the presence of a microbe in a host is suspected or discovered. Therefore, the lexicon is used to articulate an implied association between a host and a microbe. However, since it is often difficult to use the available clinical and diagnostic tools to discriminate the different ways in which microbes can exist in a host, the lexicon is often used in an ambiguous and imprecise manner. Another factor contributing to imprecise use of the lexicon is that microbial factors are often held responsible for disease pathogenesis. This relegates the part that the host plays in microbial pathogenesis to an exception, which leads to the need for qualification and modification of the terminology of infectious diseases. Recently, we proposed the "damage-response framework" to incorporate the contributions of both the host and the microbe in microbial pathogenesis in a synthesis whereby host damage was used as the common denominator to describe the outcome of the host-microbe relation. In this article, we illustrate how the application of the damage-response framework to clinical infectious diseases can clarify and make more precise the terminology used to convey the outcome of microbial infection in clinical practice.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12383613     DOI: 10.1016/s1473-3099(02)00398-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet Infect Dis        ISSN: 1473-3099            Impact factor:   25.071


  14 in total

Review 1.  Sensing gram-negative bacterial lipopolysaccharides: a human disease determinant?

Authors:  Robert S Munford
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2007-12-17       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 2.  What Is a Host? Attributes of Individual Susceptibility.

Authors:  Arturo Casadevall; Liise-Anne Pirofski
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2018-01-22       Impact factor: 3.441

3.  Interaction of Candida albicans with adherent human peripheral blood mononuclear cells increases C. albicans biofilm formation and results in differential expression of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines.

Authors:  Jyotsna Chandra; Thomas S McCormick; Yoshifumi Imamura; Pranab K Mukherjee; Mahmoud A Ghannoum
Journal:  Infect Immun       Date:  2007-03-05       Impact factor: 3.441

Review 4.  Antimicrobial Therapy in the Context of the Damage-Response Framework: the Prospect of Optimizing Therapy by Reducing Host Damage.

Authors:  Liise-Anne Pirofski; Arturo Casadevall
Journal:  Antimicrob Agents Chemother       Date:  2020-01-27       Impact factor: 5.191

Review 5.  The damage-response framework of microbial pathogenesis and infectious diseases.

Authors:  Liise-anne Pirofski; Arturo Casadevall
Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol       Date:  2008       Impact factor: 2.622

Review 6.  The state of latency in microbial pathogenesis.

Authors:  Liise-Anne Pirofski; Arturo Casadevall
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2020-09-01       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 7.  Shield as signal: lipopolysaccharides and the evolution of immunity to gram-negative bacteria.

Authors:  Robert S Munford; Alan W Varley
Journal:  PLoS Pathog       Date:  2006-06       Impact factor: 6.823

8.  Suspicion of respiratory tract infection with multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae: epidemiology and risk factors from a Paediatric Intensive Care Unit.

Authors:  Hanna Renk; Lenja Stoll; Felix Neunhoeffer; Florian Hölzl; Matthias Kumpf; Michael Hofbeck; Dominik Hartl
Journal:  BMC Infect Dis       Date:  2017-02-21       Impact factor: 3.090

9.  Environmentally persistent pathogens present unique challenges for studies of host-pathogen interactions: Reply to Field (2018).

Authors:  Christina M Davy; Michael E Donaldson; Craig K R Willis; Barry J Saville; Liam P McGuire; Heather Mayberry; Alana Wilcox; Gudrun Wibbelt; Vikram Misra; Christopher J Kyle
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2018-05-08       Impact factor: 2.912

Review 10.  The role of bacterial skin infections in atopic dermatitis: expert statement and review from the International Eczema Council Skin Infection Group.

Authors:  H Alexander; A S Paller; C Traidl-Hoffmann; L A Beck; A De Benedetto; S Dhar; G Girolomoni; A D Irvine; P Spuls; J Su; J P Thyssen; C Vestergaard; T Werfel; A Wollenberg; M Deleuran; C Flohr
Journal:  Br J Dermatol       Date:  2019-12-04       Impact factor: 9.302

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