Innate immune response in acute critical illness: a narrative review.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Innate immune response in acute critical illness: a narrative review.
Authors: Stiel, Laure, Gaudet, Alexandre, Thietart, Sara, Vallet, Hélène, Bastard, Paul, Voiriot, Guillaume, Oualha, Mehdi, Sarton, Benjamine, Kallel, Hatem, Brechot, Nicolas, Kreitmann, Louis, Benghanem, Sarah, Joffre, Jérémie, Jouan, Youenn
Source: Annals of Intensive Care; 9/4/2024, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-16, 16p
Subject Terms: MITOCHONDRIA, IMMUNOSUPPRESSIVE agents, CATASTROPHIC illness, DECISION making, IMMUNE system, AGING, IMMUNOLOGIC receptors, NATURAL immunity, INDIVIDUALIZED medicine, INFLAMMATION, CRITICAL care medicine, THROMBOSIS, PHENOTYPES, IMMUNOMODULATORS
Abstract: Background: Activation of innate immunity is a first line of host defense during acute critical illness (ACI) that aims to contain injury and avoid tissue damages. Aberrant activation of innate immunity may also participate in the occurrence of organ failures during critical illness. This review aims to provide a narrative overview of recent advances in the field of innate immunity in critical illness, and to consider future potential therapeutic strategies. Main text: Understanding the underlying biological concepts supporting therapeutic strategies modulating immune response is essential in decision-making. We will develop the multiple facets of innate immune response, especially its cellular aspects, and its interaction with other defense mechanisms. We will first describe the pathophysiological mechanisms of initiation of innate immune response and its implication during ACI. We will then develop the amplification of innate immunity mediated by multiple effectors. Our review will mainly focus on myeloid and lymphoid cellular effectors, the major actors involved in innate immune-mediated organ failure. We will third discuss the interaction and integration of innate immune response in a global view of host defense, thus considering interaction with non-immune cells through immunothrombosis, immunometabolism and long-term reprogramming via trained immunity. The last part of this review will focus on the specificities of the immune response in children and the older population. Conclusions: Recent understanding of the innate immune response integrates immunity in a highly dynamic global vision of host response. A better knowledge of the implicated mechanisms and their tissue-compartmentalization allows to characterize the individual immune profile, and one day eventually, to develop individualized bench-to-bedside immunomodulation approaches as an adjuvant resuscitation strategy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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Database: Complementary Index
More Details
ISSN:21105820
DOI:10.1186/s13613-024-01355-6
Published in:Annals of Intensive Care
Language:English