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THE SICK AND THE WEAK: NEUROPATHIES/MYOPATHIES IN THE CRITICALLY ILL

期刊

PHYSIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
卷 95, 期 3, 页码 1025-1109

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/physrev.00028.2014

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [NS082354, AR062083]
  2. Research Foundation-Flanders (Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Vlaanderen), Belgium [G.0399.12, G.0592.12]
  3. Clinical Research Fund (Klinische Onderzoeksfonds, KOF) of the University Hospitals Leuven, Belgium
  4. Flemish Government [METH08/07, METH14/06]
  5. University of Leuven
  6. ERC Advanced Grant from the Ideas Program of the EU [AdvG-2012-321670]
  7. Swedish Medical Research Council [8651]
  8. European Commission [CT-223756, COST CM1001]
  9. Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Educatiuon (STINT)
  10. Uppsala University Hospital

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Critical illness polyneuropathies (CIP) and myopathies (CIM) are common complications of critical illness. Several weakness syndromes are summarized under the term intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW). We propose a classification of different ICUAW forms (CIM, CIP, sepsis-induced, steroid-denervation myopathy) and pathophysiological mechanisms from clinical and animal model data. Triggers include sepsis, mechanical ventilation, muscle unloading, steroid treatment, or denervation. Some ICUAW forms require stringent diagnostic features; CIM is marked by membrane hypoexcitability, severe atrophy, preferential myosin loss, ultrastructural alterations, and inadequate autophagy activation while myopathies in pure sepsis do not reproduce marked myosin loss. Reduced membrane excitability results from depolarization and ion channel dysfunction. Mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to energy-dependent processes. Ubiquitin proteasome and calpain activation trigger muscle proteolysis and atrophy while protein synthesis is impaired. Myosin loss is more pronounced than actin loss in CIM. Protein quality control is altered by inadequate autophagy. Ca2+ dysregulation is present through altered Ca2+ homeostasis. We highlight clinical hallmarks, trigger factors, and potential mechanisms from human studies and animal models that allow separation of risk factors that may trigger distinct mechanisms contributing to weakness. During critical illness, altered inflammatory (cytokines) and metabolic pathways deteriorate muscle function. ICUAW prevention/treatment is limited, e.g., tight glycemic control, delaying nutrition, and early mobilization. Future challenges include identification of primary/secondary events during the time course of critical illness, the interplay between membrane excitability, bioenergetic failure and differential proteolysis, and finding new therapeutic targets by help of tailored animal models.

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