| Literature DB >> 31183570 |
Antoine Guillon1,2, Sebastien Preau3,4, Jérôme Aboab5, Eric Azabou6, Boris Jung7, Stein Silva8, Julien Textoris9,10, Fabrice Uhel11, Dominique Vodovar12,13, Lara Zafrani14, Nicolas de Prost15, Peter Radermacher16.
Abstract
Animal experiments are widely used in preclinical medical research with the goal of disease modeling and exploration of novel therapeutic approaches. In the context of sepsis and septic shock, the translation into clinical practice has been disappointing. Classical animal models of septic shock usually involve one-sex-one-age animal models, mostly in mice or rats, contrasting with the heterogeneous population of septic shock patients. Many other factors limit the reliability of preclinical models and may contribute to preclinical research failure in critical care, including the host specificity of several pathogens, the fact that laboratory animals are raised in pathogen-free facilities and that organ support techniques are either absent or minimal. Advanced animal models have been developed with the aim of improving the clinical translatability of experimental findings. So-called animal ICUs refer to the preclinical investigation of adult or even aged animals of either sex, using-in case of rats and mice-miniaturized equipment allowing for reproducing an ICU environment at a small animal scale and integrating chronic comorbidities to more closely reflect the clinical conditions studied. Strength and limitations of preclinical animal models designed to decipher the mechanisms involved in septic cardiomyopathy are discussed. This article reviews the current status and the challenges of setting up an animal ICU.Entities:
Keywords: Animal models; Septic shock
Year: 2019 PMID: 31183570 PMCID: PMC6557957 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-019-0543-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Fig. 1“Pros” and “Cons” of experimental models for septic shock research
Fig. 2Limits of classical animal models regarding sepsis/septic shock. a Infected animals are powerful models for basic laboratory observations and/or mechanistic studies of host/pathogen interactions. b Animals with a severe infection have two options, curing or dying, while human has an “intermediate” possibility, surviving. ICU patients represent an abnormal situation to an evolutionary view that is difficult to replicate. Infected animals with lethal dose of microbial agents are killed at a defined time point and compared with septic ICU patients. The ICU environment (monitoring, nursing) and treatments (specific antimicrobial treatment, organ support technics) are rarely reproduced in the animal models leading to an uncontrolled mismatch between animal models and “real life” of human care
Fig. 3ICU environment in murine experiments. a Schematic representation of the monitored parameters; b representative illustration of miniaturization of sophisticated equipment used to reproduce the ICU environment in murine experiments; A. carotis, artery carotis; A. mes. sup., artery mesenteric superior; v. portae, vein portae; A. femoralis, artery femoralis