Publication | Open Access
Gut failure in critical care: old school versus new school.
102
Citations
104
References
2015
Year
DysbiosisGastroenterologyDigestive TractGut FailureGut-derived ComplicationsCritical Care MedicineGut-organ AxisSepsisSepsis PhenotypingUlcerative ColitisIntestinal MicrobiotaMicrobiomeEmergency MedicineBacterial TranslocationPediatric GastroenterologyGut BarrierMedicineCritical Emergency MedicineGut-origin Sepsis
The concept of bacterial translocation and gut-origin sepsis as causes of systemic infectious complications and multiple organ deficiency syndrome in surgical and critically ill patients has been a recurring issue over the last decades attracting the scientific interest. Although gastrointestinal dysfunction seemingly arises frequently in intensive care unit patients, it is usually underdiagnosed or underestimated, because the pathophysiology involved is incompletely understood and its exact clinical relevance still remains controversial with an unknown yet probably adverse impact on the patients' outcome. The purpose of this review is to define gut-origin sepsis and related terms, to describe the mechanisms leading to gut-derived complications, and to illustrate the therapeutic options to prevent or limit these untoward processes.
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