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About:
Preclinical septic shock research: why we need an animal ICU
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wasabi.inria.fr
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Type:
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
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type
Academic Article
research paper
schema:ScholarlyArticle
isDefinedBy
Covid-on-the-Web dataset
title
Preclinical septic shock research: why we need an animal ICU
Creator
Radermacher, Peter
De Prost, Nicolas
Azabou, Eric
Guillon, Antoine
Textoris, Julien
Zafrani, Lara
Jung, Boris
Aboab, Jérôme
Preau, Sebastien
Silva, Stein
Uhel, Fabrice
Vodovar, Dominique
source
PMC
abstract
Animal experiments are widely used in preclinical medical research with the goal of disease modeling and exploration of novel therapeutic approaches. In the context of sepsis and septic shock, the translation into clinical practice has been disappointing. Classical animal models of septic shock usually involve one-sex-one-age animal models, mostly in mice or rats, contrasting with the heterogeneous population of septic shock patients. Many other factors limit the reliability of preclinical models and may contribute to preclinical research failure in critical care, including the host specificity of several pathogens, the fact that laboratory animals are raised in pathogen-free facilities and that organ support techniques are either absent or minimal. Advanced animal models have been developed with the aim of improving the clinical translatability of experimental findings. So-called animal ICUs refer to the preclinical investigation of adult or even aged animals of either sex, using—in case of rats and mice—miniaturized equipment allowing for reproducing an ICU environment at a small animal scale and integrating chronic comorbidities to more closely reflect the clinical conditions studied. Strength and limitations of preclinical animal models designed to decipher the mechanisms involved in septic cardiomyopathy are discussed. This article reviews the current status and the challenges of setting up an animal ICU.
has issue date
2019-06-10
(
xsd:dateTime
)
bibo:doi
10.1186/s13613-019-0543-6
bibo:pmid
31183570
has license
cc-by
sha1sum (hex)
2496d5fe267b82a9633d89d0ebf8c4915888c470
schema:url
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13613-019-0543-6
resource representing a document's title
Preclinical septic shock research: why we need an animal ICU
has PubMed Central identifier
PMC6557957
has PubMed identifier
31183570
schema:publication
Ann Intensive Care
resource representing a document's body
covid:2496d5fe267b82a9633d89d0ebf8c4915888c470#body_text
is
schema:about
of
named entity 'septic shock'
named entity 'facilities'
named entity 'ORIGINAL'
named entity 'HOST SPECIFICITY'
named entity 'SETTING'
named entity 'INTEGRATING'
named entity 'CREDIT'
named entity 'MICE OR RATS'
named entity 'REPRODUCTION'
named entity 'SCALE'
named entity 'CARDIOMYOPATHY'
named entity 'ARTICLE'
named entity 'CHANGES'
named entity 'ABSENT'
named entity 'AUTHOR'
named entity 'REVIEWS'
named entity 'FACT'
named entity 'CLINICAL PRACTICE'
named entity 'COMORBIDITIES'
named entity 'SEX'
named entity 'USUALLY'
named entity 'mechanisms'
named entity 'laboratory animals'
named entity 'therapeutic'
named entity 'involve'
named entity 'fact'
named entity 'animal models'
named entity 'disease'
named entity 'reproduction'
named entity 'Creative Commons license'
named entity 'ICU'
named entity 'clinical practice'
named entity 'septic shock'
named entity 'small animal'
named entity 'medical research'
named entity 'preclinical research'
named entity 'Preclinical'
named entity 'investigation'
named entity 'experimental models'
named entity 'preclinical studies'
named entity 'experimental models'
named entity 'ICU'
named entity 'inbred'
named entity 'scientific community'
named entity 'Nitric oxide'
named entity 'rodents'
named entity 'mortality rates'
named entity 'animal model'
named entity 'ICU'
named entity 'PEEP'
named entity 'lung'
named entity 'cardiomyopathy'
named entity 'pathogens'
named entity 'inflection points'
named entity 'septic shock'
named entity 'mouse models'
named entity 'sepsis'
named entity 'false positive results'
named entity 'iNOS'
named entity 'mouse models'
named entity 'glucose metabolism'
named entity 'confounding factors'
named entity 'intensive care'
named entity 'ICU'
named entity 'pre-clinical'
named entity 'mechanical ventilation'
named entity 'sepsis'
named entity 'human disease'
named entity 'inotropic'
named entity 'adrenergic stimulation'
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