| Literature DB >> 25943883 |
Maiara Marx Luz Fiusa1, Marco Antonio Carvalho-Filho2, Joyce M Annichino-Bizzacchi3,4, Erich V De Paula5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coagulation and innate immunity have been linked together for at least 450 million years of evolution. Sepsis, one of the world's leading causes of death, is probably the condition in which this evolutionary link is more evident. However, the biological and the clinical relevance of this association have only recently gained the attention of the scientific community. DISCUSSION: During sepsis, the host response to a pathogen is invariably associated with coagulation activation. For several years, coagulation activation has been solely regarded as a mechanism of tissue damage, a concept that led to several clinical trials of anticoagulant agents for sepsis. More recently, this paradigm has been challenged by the failure of these clinical trials, and by a growing bulk of evidence supporting the concept that coagulation activation is beneficial for pathogen clearance. In this article we discuss recent basic and clinical data that point to a more balanced view of the detrimental and beneficial consequences of coagulation activation in sepsis. Reappraisal of the association between coagulation and immune activation from an evolutionary medicine perspective offers a unique opportunity to gain new insights about the pathogenesis of sepsis, paving the way to more successful approaches in both basic and clinical research in this field.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25943883 PMCID: PMC4422540 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0327-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Effect of coagulation factor deficiencies in animal models of sepsis
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| ↑ | Pneumococcal sepsis | ↓ bacterial dissemination [ |
| Melioidosis** | Unaltered [ | ||
| Endotoxemia | ↑ mortality [ | ||
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| ↓ | Melioidosis** | ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ |
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| ↓ | Pneumococcal sepsis | ↑ bacterial dissemination [ |
| Melioidosis** | ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↑ | Melioidosis** | ↓ mortality, ↓ bacterial dissemination [ |
| Septic peritonitis | ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↓ |
| Unaltered [ |
| Peritoneal sepsis | ↓ mortality [ | ||
| Listeriosis | ↓ mortality, ↓ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↓ | Endotoxemia | Unaltered [ |
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| ↑ bacterial growth, ↔ survival [ | ||
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| ↓ | Endotoxemia | Unaltered [ |
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| ↓ | Melioidosis** | ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ |
| H. influenza infection | ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
| Klebsiella pneumonia | ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↓ |
| ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ |
| Group A streptococci | ↑ mortality [ | ||
| Listeriosis | ↑ mortality, ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↓ | Group A streptococci | ↑ mortality [ |
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| ↓ |
| Unaltered [ |
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| ↑ mortality [ | ||
| Endotoxemia | ↓ inflammation [ | ||
| Endotoxemia | ↓ mortality, ↓ inflammation [ | ||
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| ↓ |
| ↑ mortality [ |
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| ↓ |
| ↓ mortality [ |
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| ↓ |
| Unaltered [ |
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| ↑ bacterial dissemination [ | ||
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| ↑ | Endotoxemia | ↑ mortality [ |
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| ↓ |
| Transient ↑ bacterial outgrowth [ |
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| ↓ | Endotoxemia | ↓ mortality, ↓ inflammation [ |
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| ↑ | Septic peritonitis | Unaltered [ |
| Endotoxemia | ↓ mortality [ |
*The global effect of each genetic deficiency on hemostasis was defined based on current knowledge about hemostatic mechanisms. **Respiratory sepsis by intranasal instillation of Gram-negative Burkholderia pseudomallei. ***Lower mortality observed only in heterozygous mice. EPCR: endothelial protein C receptor. t-PA: tissue-type plasminogen activator; PAI-1: plasminogen activator inhibitor-1; TAFI: thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor; ip: intraperitoneal; het: heterozygous.
Figure 1Potential consequences of coagulation activation during sepsis. Recognition of invading pathogens by innate immunity triggers mechanisms that contribute to pathogen clearance such as endothelial activation and recruitment of immune cells to infection sites. Coagulation activation is part of this stereotyped response. During sepsis, increased tissue factor expression, down-regulation of natural anticoagulant pathways, and hypofibrinolysis result in increased thrombin generation and clot formation. The beneficial consequences of coagulation activation for pathogen clearance are depicted in panel A and include the release of antimicrobial peptides from the proteolysis of several proteins of the coagulation cascade, and limitation of pathogen spread by fibrin-mediated hemostatic containment. However, deregulated coagulation activation could also contribute to microvascular thrombosis and hypoxia, thereby contributing to tissue damage in sepsis. The precise identification of the moment when coagulation activation turns from a beneficial to a detrimental process would allow more rational therapeutic approaches for sepsis, preserving the ancient link between hemostasis and innate immune response. PAI-1: plasminogen activator inhibitor-1.