| Literature DB >> 34183380 |
Kara G Greenfield1, Vladimir P Badovinac2,3,4, Thomas S Griffith5,6,7,8,9, Kathryn A Knoop10,11.
Abstract
Sepsis can result from a variety of pathogens, originating from a range of sources. A vast range of presenting symptoms is included in the catch-all term of "bacteremia," making diagnosis and prognosis particularly troublesome. One underexplored factor contributing to disparate outcomes is the age of the patient. Neonatal sepsis in very-low-birth-weight infants can result in vastly different immunological outcomes unique from sepsis in adults. It is also becoming increasingly clear, both from preclinical experimental models and clinical observations, that the age and history of previous microbial exposures can significantly influence the course of infection from sepsis and cytokine storms to immunopathology. In this study, we will explore key differences between neonatal and adult sepsis, experimental models used to study sepsis, and how responses to the surrounding microbial universe shape development of the immune system and impact, positively or negatively, the course of disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34183380 PMCID: PMC8686527 DOI: 10.4049/immunohorizons.2000104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunohorizons ISSN: 2573-7732
Summary of characteristics of neonatal sepsis and adult sepsis
| Neonatal EOS | Neonatal LOS | Adult | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Route | Maternal pathogen transmission In utero During birth | Contamination of skin-resident bacteria during clinical procedures | Surgical complications |
| Enteric pathogens translocating the intestinal lumen | Translocating pathogens from tissue infections (e.g., appendicitis, pneumonia, urinary tract infections) | ||
| Common causative pathogens | GBS | Skin-resident bacteria (such as | Similar rates of Gram-negative versus Gram-positive bacteria |
|
| Gut-resident bacteria (such as | Gram-negative species: | |
| Gram-positive species: | |||
| Incidence | 0.26 cases per 1000 live births in 2010 ( | 0.31 per 1000 live births ( | 1.2% of patients develop sepsis after elective surgery ( |
| Maternal GBS screening initiatives contribute to a decreased incidence from 1.8 cases per 1000 live births in the early 1990s ( | 2% of patients develop sepsis following trauma-associated surgical cases ( | ||
| Risk factors | Low birth weight | Low birth weight | 5–66% of ventilated patients develop ventilator-associated pneumonia ( |
| Surgery necessitated by trauma among orthopedic patients | |||
| Failure to screen for maternal GBS colonization | Prolonged use of antibiotics | Prolonged need for mechanical ventilation, i.v., or catheter increases risk of infection in associated tissues | |
| Failure to administer intrapartum antimicrobial prophylaxis |
FIGURE 1.The neonatal response to bacterial sepsis differs compared with the adult response when looking at clinical data from LOS, in vitro data from human cells, and in vivo animal models.
Observations suggest cytokine differences may contribute to immune dysfunction and sepsis outcomes. The figure was created with BioRender.