Bench-to-bedside review: Burn-induced cerebral inflammation – a neglected entity?

被引:0
作者
Michael A Flierl
Philip F Stahel
Basel M Touban
Kathryn M Beauchamp
Steven J Morgan
Wade R Smith
Kyros R Ipaktchi
机构
[1] University of Colorado School of Medicine,Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Denver Health Medical Center
[2] University of Colorado School of Medicine,Department of Neurosurgery, Denver Health Medical Center
来源
Critical Care | / 13卷
关键词
Nitric Oxide; Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome; Thermal Injury; Reactive Nitrogen Species; Severe Burn;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Severe burn injury remains a major burden on patients and healthcare systems. Following severe burns, the injured tissues mount a local inflammatory response aiming to restore homeostasis. With excessive burn load, the immune response becomes disproportionate and patients may develop an overshooting systemic inflammatory response, compromising multiple physiological barriers in the lung, kidney, liver, and brain. If the blood–brain barrier is breached, systemic inflammatory molecules and phagocytes readily enter the brain and activate sessile cells of the central nervous system. Copious amounts of reactive oxygen species, reactive nitrogen species, proteases, cytokines/chemokines, and complement proteins are being released by these inflammatory cells, resulting in additional neuronal damage and life-threatening cerebral edema. Despite the correlation between cerebral complications in severe burn victims with mortality, burn-induced neuroinflammation continues to fly under the radar as an underestimated entity in the critically ill burn patient. In this paper, we illustrate the molecular events leading to blood–brain barrier breakdown, with a focus on the subsequent neuroinflammatory changes leading to cerebral edema in patients with severe burns.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 19 条
  • [1] Bench-to-bedside review: β-Adrenergic modulation in sepsis
    de Montmollin, Etienne
    Aboab, Jerome
    Mansart, Arnaud
    Annane, Djillali
    CRITICAL CARE, 2009, 13 (05)
  • [2] Bench-to-bedside review: Chloride in critical illness
    Yunos, Nor'azim Mohd
    Bellomo, Rinaldo
    Story, David
    Kellum, John
    CRITICAL CARE, 2010, 14 (04)
  • [3] Bench-to-bedside review: Vasopressin in the management of septic shock
    Russell, James A.
    CRITICAL CARE, 2011, 15 (04):
  • [4] Lung Ischemia Reperfusion Injury: A Bench-to-Bedside Review
    Weyker, Paul D.
    Webb, Christopher A. J.
    Kiamanesh, David
    Flynn, Brigid C.
    SEMINARS IN CARDIOTHORACIC AND VASCULAR ANESTHESIA, 2013, 17 (01) : 28 - 43
  • [5] Bench-to-bedside review: Inhaled nitric oxide therapy in adults
    Benedict C Creagh-Brown
    Mark JD Griffiths
    Timothy W Evans
    Critical Care, 13
  • [6] Bench-to-bedside review: Sepsis - from the redox point of view
    Michael Éverton Andrades
    Arian Morina
    Snežana Spasić
    Ivan Spasojević
    Critical Care, 15
  • [7] BURN-INDUCED COAGULOPATHIES: A COMPREHENSIVE REVIEW
    Ball, Robert L.
    Keyloun, John W.
    Brummel-Ziedins, Kathleen
    Orfeo, Thomas
    Palmieri, Tina L.
    Johnson, Laura S.
    Moffatt, Lauren T.
    Pusateri, Anthony E.
    Shupp, Jeffrey W.
    SHOCK, 2020, 54 (02): : 154 - 167
  • [8] Bench-to-bedside review: Natural killer cells in sepsis - guilty or not guilty?
    Fernando Souza-Fonseca-Guimaraes
    Jean-Marc Cavaillon
    Minou Adib-Conquy
    Critical Care, 17
  • [9] Bench-to-bedside review: Nitric oxide in critical illness – update 2008
    Steven M Hollenberg
    Ismail Cinel
    Critical Care, 13
  • [10] Bench-to-bedside review: Carbon monoxide - from mitochondrial poisoning to therapeutic use
    Bauer, Inge
    Pannen, Benedikt H. J.
    CRITICAL CARE, 2009, 13 (04):