Shock : molecular, cellular, and systemic pathobiological aspects and therapeutic approaches : the official journal the Shock Society, the European Shock Society, the Brazilian Shock Society, the International Federation of Shock Societies
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Gram-negative bacteria remain the leading cause of sepsis, a disease that is consistently in the top 10 causes of death internationally. Curing bacteremia alone does not necessarily end the disease process as other factors may cause inflammatory damage. Bacterial outer membrane vesicles (OMVs) are naturally produced blebs from the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, which contain various proteins and lipopolysaccharide (LPS). ⋯ Downstream events such as the recruitment of neutrophils into tissues due to the presentation of vascular adhesion molecules also occur in OMV-treated animals. Although soluble LPS elicits stronger responses than did OMVs, responses to the latter consistently exceeded those associated with lactated Ringer's infusion. These results indicate OMVs, independent of the parent bacteria, do initiate an inflammatory response; however, further studies are required to better characterize the temporal biomolecular interactions involved.