| Literature DB >> 21362652 |
Jason N Katz1, Kamalkumar P Kolappa2, Richard C Becker3.
Abstract
Sepsis, acute lung injury, and ARDS contribute substantially to the expanding burden of critical illness within our ICUs. Each of these processes is characterized by a myriad of injurious events, including apoptosis, microvascular dysfunction, abnormal coagulation, and dysregulated host immunity. Only recently have platelets--long considered merely effectors of thrombosis--been implicated in inflammatory conditions and the pathobiology of these disease processes. A growing body of evidence suggests a prominent role for maladaptive platelet activation and aggregation during sepsis and ARDS and has begun to underscore the pluripotential influence of platelets on outcomes in critical illness. Not only do platelets enhance vascular injury through thrombotic mechanisms but also appear to help orchestrate pathologic immune responses and are pivotal players in facilitating leukocyte recruitment to vulnerable tissue. These events contribute to the organ damage and poor patient outcomes that still plague the care of these high-risk individuals. An understanding of the role of platelets in critical illness also highlights the potential for both the development of risk stratification schema and the use of novel, targeted therapies that might alter the natural history of sepsis, acute lung injury, and ARDS. Future studies of adenosine, platelet polyphosphates, and the platelet transcriptome/proteome also should add considerably to our ability to unravel the mysteries of the versatile platelet.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21362652 PMCID: PMC7094391 DOI: 10.1378/chest.10-1971
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chest ISSN: 0012-3692 Impact factor: 9.410
Platelet Receptors, Surface Molecules, and Intracellular Constituents Contributing to the Inflammatory Response During Critical Illness
| Platelet Components | Stimuli | Effects |
|---|---|---|
| Receptors and surface molecules | ||
| Integrins | ||
| GP IIb/IIIa | Fibrinogen, fibrin | Platelet aggregation |
| G-protein-coupled receptors | ||
| Protease-activated receptors | Thrombin | Platelet activation |
| Thromboxane receptors | Thromboxane A2 | Activation, aggregation |
| ADP receptors | ADP | Activation, aggregation, altered rheology |
| P-selectin | Inflammation and tissue injury | Adhesion, cellular communication |
| Intracellular constituents | ||
| Cytoplasmic substances | ||
| Serotonin | Inflammation and tissue injury | Platelet activation |
| Epinephrine | Inflammation and tissue injury | Platelet activation |
| α Granules | Inflammation and tissue injury | Secretion facilitates coagulation |
| Dense granules | Inflammation and tissue injury | Release ADP, calcium, serotonin |
ADP = adenosine diphosphate; GP IIb/IIIa = glycoprotein IIb/IIIa.
Figure 1Key participants in human platelet activation and aggregation. ADP = adenosine diphosphate; GP IIb/IIIa = glycoprotein IIb/IIIa.
Figure 2A, Influence of platelet and platelet-neutrophil interactions on the pathophysiology of sepsis and, B, ALI. In sepsis, platelets may be stimulated by tissue injury, hypoxia, cytokines, LPS, and endotoxemia, leading to microvascular obstruction, cellular necrosis/apoptosis, and an enhanced leukocyte response. In ALI, platelets and platelet-neutrophil complexes can similarly be found within the pulmonary vasculature, airways, interstitial, and alveolar compartments. ALI = acute lung injury; LPS = lipopolysaccharide.