| Literature DB >> 35126060 |
Jie Lin1,2,3, Binbin Tan1,2,3, Yuhong Li1,2,3, Hua Feng1,2,3, Yujie Chen1,2,3.
Abstract
Sepsis susceptibility is significantly increased in patients with intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), owing to immunosuppression and intestinal microbiota dysbiosis. To date, ICH with sepsis occurrence is still difficult for clinicians to deal with, and the mortality, as well as long-term cognitive disability, is still increasing. Actually, intracerebral hemorrhage and sepsis are mutually exacerbated via similar pathophysiological mechanisms, mainly consisting of systemic inflammation and circulatory dysfunction. The main consequence of these two processes is neural dysfunction and multiple organ damages, notably, via oxidative stress and neurotoxic mediation under the mediation of central nervous system activation and blood-brain barrier disruption. Besides, the comorbidity-induced multiple organ damages will produce numerous damage-associated molecular patterns and consequently exacerbate the severity of the disease. At present, the prospective views are about operating artificial restriction for the peripheral immune system and achieving cross-tolerance among organs via altering immune cell composition to reduce inflammatory damage.Entities:
Keywords: brain dysfunction; inflammatory; intracerebral hemorrhage; neuronal death; sepsis
Year: 2022 PMID: 35126060 PMCID: PMC8814659 DOI: 10.3389/fncel.2021.819182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5102 Impact factor: 5.505
FIGURE 1Two main pathophysiological processes are involved in brain dysfunction in ICH with sepsis. These two processes are interdependent, on one hand, and mutually independent, on the other hand. Circulatory dysfunction will be followed by microcirculatory dysfunction and finally result in ischemia and hypoxia of tissues and multiple peripheral organ damages. In systemic inflammation, proinflammatory mediators will be released, and the DAMPs from the periphery will be allowed into the brain due to BBB disruption, which consequently activates CNS cells. The main consequence of these two processes is neural dysfunction, notably via oxidative stress and neurotoxic mediation. Neural dysfunction widely exists in the brain and accounts for the brain dysfunction via the alteration of neurotransmission. DAMPs, damage-associated molecular patterns; BBB, blood-brain barrier; CNS, central nervous system.
Neuronal death patterns of both ICH and sepsis.
| Types | Activators | Characterization | References |
| Ferroptosis | Iron and extracellular glutamine | Plasma membrane integrity loss, organelles disruption and swelling, mitochondria shrunk, without DNA fragmentation |
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| Necroptosis | Inflammatory factors | Plasma membrane integrity loss, organelles disruption and swelling, without mitochondria shrunk, without DNA fragmentation | |
| Apoptosis | Inflammatory factors | Chromatin condensation, nuclear shrinkage, and DNA fragmentation | |
| Oxytosis | Glutamate; | Mitochondrial fragmentation, without DNA fragmentation | |
| Pyroptosis | Inflammatory factors | Nuclear condensation, cell swelling, lipid membrane vacuole formation, lipid membrane ruptures, without DNA fragmentation |
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