| Literature DB >> 23742651 |
Kenneth Mark Coggeshall1, Florea Lupu, Jimmy Ballard, Jordan P Metcalf, Judith A James, Darise Farris, Shinichiro Kurosawa.
Abstract
Inhalation anthrax is often described as a toxin-mediated disease. However, the toxaemia model does not account for the high mortality of inhalation anthrax relative to other forms of the disease or for the pathology present in inhalation anthrax. Patients with inhalation anthrax consistently show extreme bacteraemia and, in contrast to animals challenged with toxin, signs of sepsis. Rather than toxaemia, we propose that death in inhalation anthrax results from an overwhelming bacteraemia that leads to severe sepsis. According to our model, the central role of anthrax toxin is to permit the vegetative bacteria to escape immune detection. Other forms of B. anthracis infection have lower mortality because their overt symptoms early in the course of disease cause patients to seek medical care at a time when the infection and its sequelae can still be reversed by antibiotics. Thus, the sepsis model explains key features of inhalation anthrax and may offer a more complete understanding of disease pathology for researchers as well as those involved in the care of patients.Entities:
Keywords: Gram-positive; Sepsis; anthrax; disseminated intravascular coagulation; lethal factor; oedema factor
Mesh:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23742651 PMCID: PMC3729634 DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.12075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Fig. 1The sepsis model. (1) Spores are inhaled (top left) and move from the airways into the mediastinal lymph node (top right and middle panels) through an unknown mechanism. (2) Spore germination occurs either within the mediastinum or at a point before entering the organ. The bacteria proliferate and produce toxin which suppresses the immune response and enables the bacteria to overwhelm innate immunity. (3) The bacteria enter the blood circulation where continued bacterial proliferation eventually yields to extreme bacteraemia and eventual sepsis. (4) We hypothesize that the peptidoglycan present in the vegetative bacteria and shed during bacterial replication causes systemic inflammation, complement activation and platelet aggregation. These sepsis-associated events contribute to disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC), organ failure, and eventual death of the patient.