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Volume 89, Issue 2, Pages 311-326 (April 2009)


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The Stressed Host Response to Infection: The Disruptive Signals and Rhythms of Systemic Inflammation

Stephen F. Lowry, MD, FACS, FRCS(Edin) (Hon)email address

The cognate signals from sterile or pathogen-induced sources converge on the same recognition or response pathways. In the surgical patient, a systemic response to infection most often occurs in the context of ongoing inflammatory stress. Such an inflammatory response is modulated initially by the magnitude of injury and by patient-specific (endogenous) factors, such as confounding illness, age, and genetic variation. Over an extended period of stress, treatmentrelated (exogenous) factors add unpredictability to host responses to subsequent challenges, such as acquired infection. The host response is discussed in the context of how existing sterile stressors may modify the response to acquired infection in surgical patients.

Department of Surgery, University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, 125 Paterson Street, Suite 7300, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA

 This work was supported by grant GM-34695 from the National Institutes of Health.

PII: S0039-6109(08)00139-4

doi:10.1016/j.suc.2008.09.004


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