Neonatal sepsis and cardiovascular dysfunction I: mechanisms and pathophysiology

Publication date

2024

Authors

Duignan, Sophie M.
Lakshminrusimha, Satyan
Armstrong, Kathryn
de Boode, Willem P.
El-Khuffash, Afif
Franklin, Orla
Molloy, Eleanor J.
de Boode, Willem P.
Plötz, Franz B.
Strunk, Tobias

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Abstract: The highest incidence of sepsis across all age groups occurs in neonates leading to substantial mortality and morbidity. Cardiovascular dysfunction frequently complicates neonatal sepsis including biventricular systolic and/or diastolic dysfunction, vasoregulatory failure, and pulmonary arterial hypertension. The haemodynamic response in neonatal sepsis can be hyperdynamic or hypodynamic and the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms are heterogeneous. The diagnosis and definition of both neonatal sepsis and cardiovascular dysfunction complicating neonatal sepsis are challenging and not consensus-based. Future developments in neonatal sepsis management will be facilitated by common definitions and datasets especially in neonatal cardiovascular optimisation. Impact: Cardiovascular dysfunction is common in neonatal sepsis but there is no consensus-based definition, making calculating the incidence and designing clinical trials challenging.Neonatal cardiovascular dysfunction is related to the inflammatory response, which can directly target myocyte function and systemic haemodynamics.

Keywords

Taverne, Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Citation

Duignan, S M, Lakshminrusimha, S, Armstrong, K, de Boode, W P, El-Khuffash, A, Franklin, O, Molloy, E J, de Boode, W P, Plötz, F B, Strunk, T, Degtyareva, M, Küster, H, Giannoni, E, Bliss, J M, Taal, H R, Klingenberg, C, Naver, L & van den Hoogen, A 2024, 'Neonatal sepsis and cardiovascular dysfunction I : mechanisms and pathophysiology', Pediatric Research, vol. 95, no. 5, pp. 1207–1216. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41390-023-02926-2