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Crit Rev Biomed Eng · Jan 2012
ReviewSepsis through the eyes of an engineer -- why treatments have succeeded and failed.
- Jeffrey Jopling and Timothy G Buchman.
- Department of Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, 1364 Clifton Road, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA.
- Crit Rev Biomed Eng. 2012 Jan 1; 40 (4): 353-61.
AbstractThe sepsis syndrome is an old phenomenon. A destructive response to a system disturbance, it manifests as widespread inflammation. Over the past two centuries, biomedical research has identified triggers and described components of the pathways that underlie the sepsis syndrome. Attempts at translating these findings into preventive and therapeutic interventions have met with varying levels of success. In this chapter, we examine the history of sepsis science through an engineering lens. Patterned attempts to intervene in the natural history of the sepsis syndrome will be discussed in parallel with similar, hypothetical adjustments made to a model system from the engineering canon. This juxtaposition will facilitate our review of the history of sepsis science. Using the logic of systems engineering and network science, we propose a way forward.
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