Articles: sepsis.
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Mitophagy-related genes could facilitate the development of septic shock during immune infiltration.
Septic shock often occurs following critically low blood pressure in patients with sepsis, and is accompanied by a high death rate. Although mitophagy is associated with infection and immune responses, its role in septic shock remains unknown. This study screened effective mitophagy-related genes (MRGs) for medical practice and depicted immune infiltration situations in patients with septic shock. ⋯ Importantly, patients with septic shock with the 3 highly expressed hub genes displayed worse prognosis than did patients without septic shock. MAP1LC3B, ULK1, and CDC37 are considered hub MRGs in the development of septic shock and could represent promising diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers in blood tissue. The validated hub genes and immune infiltration pattern expand our knowledge on MRG functional mechanisms, which provides guidance and direction for the development of septic shock diagnostic and therapeutic markers.
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Septic shock can be caused by a variety of mechanisms including direct effects of bacterial toxins such as endotoxin. Annually, approximately 5-7 million patients worldwide develop sepsis with very high endotoxin activity in the blood and more than half die. ⋯ However, while characteristic, the clinical phenotype is not unique to patients with high endotoxin, and the diagnosis relies on the measurement of endotoxin activity in addition to clinical assessment. Therapies for endotoxic septic shock are limited with immune modulating therapies under investigation and extracorporeal blood purification still controversial in many parts of the world.
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We herein report a three-year-old boy with septic pulmonary embolism caused by Tsukamurella paurometabola bacteremia during chemotherapy for rhabdomyosarcoma. During the interval of chemotherapy, the patient was temporarily discharged with a peripherally inserted central venous catheter but was re-admitted to the hospital with a fever on the same day. ⋯ The patient had a persistent fever, and computed tomography performed on the ninth day showed septic pulmonary embolism. We stress the importance of being aware of the possibility of septic pulmonary embolism in patients with Tsukamurella bacteremia.