Sepsis and Coronavirus
Disease 2019: Common Features and Anti-Inflammatory Therapeutic Approaches
by Beltrán-García, Jesús; Osca-Verdegal, Rebeca; Pallardó,
Federico V.; Ferreres, José; Rodríguez, María; Mulet, Sandra; Ferrando-Sánchez,
Carolina; Carbonell, Nieves; García-Giménez, José Luis
Critical Care
Medicine: December 2020
- Volume 48 - Issue 12 - p 1841-1844
Great efforts are being made worldwide to identify the
specific clinical characteristics of infected critically ill patients that
mediate the associated pathogenesis, including vascular dysfunction,
thrombosis, dysregulated inflammation, and respiratory complications. Recently,
coronavirus disease 2019 has been closely related to sepsis, which suggests
that most deaths in ICUs in infected patients are produced by viral sepsis.
Understanding the physiopathology of the disease that lead to sepsis after
severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection is a current clinical
need to improve intensive care–applied therapies applied to critically ill
patients. Although the whole representative data characterizing the immune and
inflammatory status in coronavirus disease 2019 patients are not completely
known, it is clear that hyperinflammation and coagulopathy contribute to
disease severity. Here, we present some common features shared by severe
coronavirus disease 2019 patients and sepsis and describe proposed
anti-inflammatory therapies for coronavirus disease 2019 which have been
previously evaluated in sepsis.
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