Myocardial Dysfunction Post-Sepsis in critical ICU patients

Amr Fawzy Abdel Moneim;

Abstract


Sepsis is generally viewed as a disease aggravated by an inappropriate immune response encountered in the afflicted individual. As an important organ system frequently compromised by sepsis and always affected by septic shock, the cardiovascular system and its dysfunction during sepsis have been studied in clinical and basic research for more than 5 decades.
Although a number of mediators and pathways have been shown to be associated with myocardial depression in sepsis, the precise cause remains unclear to date. There is currently no evidence supporting global ischemia as an underlying cause of myocardial dysfunction in sepsis; however, in septic patients with coexistent and possibly undiagnosed coronary artery disease, regional myocardial ischemia or infarction secondary to coronary artery disease may certainly occur. A circulating myocardial depressant factor in septic shock has long been proposed, and potential candidates for a myocardial depressant factor include cytokines, prostanoids, and nitric oxide, among others.
Endothelial activation and induction of the coagulatory system also contribute to the pathophysiology in sepsis. Prompt and adequate antibiotic therapy


Other data

Title Myocardial Dysfunction Post-Sepsis in critical ICU patients
Other Titles اختلال وظيفة عضلة القلب نتيجة الصدمة التسممية لمرضي العناية
Authors Amr Fawzy Abdel Moneim
Issue Date 2017

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