• Critical care medicine · Feb 2017

    Collapse of the Microbiome, Emergence of the Pathobiome, and the Immunopathology of Sepsis.

    • John C Alverdy and Monika A Krezalek.
    • All authors: The Department of Surgery, University of Chicago, Pritzker School of Medicine, Chicago, IL.
    • Crit. Care Med. 2017 Feb 1; 45 (2): 337-347.

    AbstractThe definition of sepsis has been recently modified to accommodate emerging knowledge in the field, while at the same time being recognized as challenging, if not impossible, to define. Here, we seek to clarify the current understanding of sepsis as one that has been typically framed as a disorder of inflammation to one in which the competing interests of the microbiota, pathobiota, and host immune cells lead to loss of resilience and nonresolving organ dysfunction. Here, we challenge the existence of the idea of noninfectious sepsis given that critically ill humans never exist in a germ-free state. Finally, we propose a new vision of the pathophysiology of sepsis that includes the invariable loss of the host's microbiome with the emergence of a pathobiome consisting of both "healthcare-acquired and healthcare-adapted pathobiota." Under this framework, the critically ill patient is viewed as a host colonized by pathobiota dynamically expressing emergent properties which drive, and are driven by, a pathoadaptive immune response.

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