4.4 Review

Sepsis and septic shock: endothelial molecular pathogenesis associated with vascular microthrombotic disease

Journal

THROMBOSIS JOURNAL
Volume 17, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12959-019-0198-4

Keywords

Anti-microthrombotic therapy; C5b-9 (membrane attack complex [MAC]); Disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC; ill-founded DIC); Disseminated intravascular microthrombosis (DIT); Endotheliopathy; Microthrombogenesis; Multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (MODS); Therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE); TTP-like syndrome; Unusually large von Willebrand factor multimers (ULVWF); Vascular microthrombotic disease (VMTD)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In addition to protective immune response, sepsis is characterized by destructive endothelial response of the host, leading to endotheliopathy and its molecular dysfunction. Complement activation generates membrane attack complex (MAC). MAC causes channel formation to the cell membrane of pathogen, leading to death of microorganisms. In the host, MAC also may induce channel formation to innocent bystander endothelial cells (ECs) and ECs cannot be protected. This provokes endotheliopathy, which activates two independent molecular pathways: inflammatory and microthrombotic. Activated inflammatory pathway promotes the release of inflammatory cytokines and triggers inflammation. Activated microthrombotic pathway mediates platelet activation and exocytosis of unusually large von Willebrand factor multimers (ULVWF) from ECs and initiates microthrombogenesis. Excessively released ULVWF become anchored to ECs as long elongated strings and recruit activated platelets to assemble platelet-ULVWF complexes and form microthrombi. These microthrombi strings trigger disseminated intravascular microthrombosis (DIT), which is the underlying pathology of endotheliopathy-associated vascular microthrombotic disease (EA-VMTD). Sepsis-induced endotheliopathy promotes inflammation and DIT. Inflammation produces inflammatory response and DIT orchestrates consumptive thrombocytopenia, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia, and multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (MODS). Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) is a combined phenotype of inflammation and endotheliopathy-associated (EA)-VMTD. Successful therapeutic design for sepsis can be achieved by counteracting the pathologic microthrombogenesis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available