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Invitation to participate in a multi-center study for validation of cerebral computed tomography angiography and computed tomography perfusion in the determination of cerebral circulatory arrest during brain death/death by neurological criteria diagnosis procedure in paediatric population below 12 years of age

Authors :
Romuald Bohatyrewicz
Joanna Sołek-Pastuszka
Wojciech Walas
Katarzyna Sznajder
Andrzej Falba
Katarzyna Chamier-Ciemińska
Wojciech Poncyljusz
Wojciech Dąbrowski
Beata Rybojad
Magdalena Woźniak
Joanna Wojczal
Piotr Luchowski
Marzena Zielińska
Maciej Guziński
Katarzyna Sierakowska
Tamara Kołakowska
Zbigniew Serafin
Alicja Bartkowska-Śniatkowska
Katarzyna Jończyk-Potoczna
Krzysztof Kobylarz
Elżbieta Byrska-Maciejasz
Łukasz Wyrobek
Andrzej Piotrowski
Elżbieta Jurkiewicz
Andrzej Kościesza
Marek Migdał
Mariola Tałałaj
Piotr Jakubów
Jacek Robert Janica
Izabela Pągowska-Klimek
Michał Brzewski
Paweł Jurszewicz
Maria Dziejowska
Elżbieta Milewicz-Podgórska
Monika Bekiesinska-Figatowska
Edyta Szurowska
Radoslaw Owczuk
Krzysztof Kusza
Marcin Sawicki
Source :
Anaesthesiology Intensive Therapy, Vol 53, Iss 2, Pp 97-102 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Termedia Publishing House, 2021.

Abstract

In recent years commensal microorganisms are not just “passive occupants”, but important element of homeostasis. There are numerous reports documenting the composition and role of the gut, skin or vagina microbiome but the role of commensal organisms living in the lungs is relatively unknown. Pulmonary microbiome impact on the immune response of the host organism and may indicate new therapeutic directions. Lung microbiome, by modulating the expression of innate immunity genes, causes an increase in the concentration of IL-5, IL-10, IFNγ and CCL11, affects the TLR4 dependent response of pulmonary macrophages and modulate the production of antibacterial peptides contained in the mucus. It is documented that disorders of the lung microbiome contribute to asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. However it is known that pulmonary dysbiosis also occurs in critically ill patients. It is possible, therefore, that microbiota-targeted therapy may constitute the future therapeutic direction in ICU.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16425758 and 17312531
Volume :
53
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Anaesthesiology Intensive Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7ecad5c610447cca4e9220de802892a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5114/ait.2021.107189