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Background: Acute respiratory distress syndrome due to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with high mortality. Several studies have reported that the microcirculation responds adequately to hypoxia in COVID-19 patients by increasing oxygen availability, in contrast to the inadequate response observed in patients with bacterial sepsis. Red blood cells (RBCs), the key cells for oxygen transport, and notably their rheology, are altered during bacterial sepsis, but few data are available in patients with COVID-19.
Methods: In this prospective, non-interventional study, shape was assessed on admission (or inclusion for the volunteers) using Pearson's second coefficient of dissymmetry (PCD) on the histogram obtained with a flow cytometer technique. A null value represents a perfect spherical shape. RBC deformability was determined using ektacytometry by the elongation index in relation to the shear stress (0.3 to 50 Pa) applied to the RBC membrane. A higher elongation index indicates greater RBC deformability. Results were compared across groups. Scanning electronic microscopy was performed on RBCs from COVID-19 patients. RBC shape and deformability were also assessed on days 3 and 7 in COVID-19 patients.
Results: Forty-nine ICU patients were included (30 with COVID-19 ARDS and 19 with bacterial sepsis). ARDS was more severe in patients with COVID-19 than in those with sepsis (PaO/FiO 99 [73-154] vs. 270 [239-295] mmHg < 0.001) and mechanical ventilation was more frequently required (87 vs. 21%; < 0.001). Mortality was significantly higher in COVID-19 patients (15/30 [50%] vs. 4/19 [21%], = 0.046). RBCs were significantly more spherical in septic patients (PCD -0.40 [-0.56; -0.18]) than in healthy volunteers (PCD -0.54 [-0.66; -0.49]) but not than in COVID-19 patients (-0.48 [-0.55; -0.43]). In COVID-19 non-survivors ( = 11), sphericity was more marked on day 7 (PCD -0.40 [-0.47; -0.28]) than on day 1 (PCD vs. -0.49 [-0.59; -0.44]); = 0.045. At ICU admission, RBC deformability was altered for all shear stress values studied in septic patients compared to COVID-19 patients and healthy volunteers (maximum elongation index for septic patients: 0.600 [0.594-0.630] vs. 0.646 [0.637-0.653] for COVID-19 patients and 0.640 [0.635-0.650] for healthy volunteers; both < 0.001). In the 18 COVID-19 patients studied for 7 days, RBC deformability did not change over time and was not related to outcome. At day 1, RBCs from COVID-19 patients showed a normal structure on scanning electronic microscopy.
Conclusion: In contrast to the significantly altered shape and decreased deformability in patients with bacterial sepsis, RBCs from severely hypoxemic COVID-19 patients had normal deformability on admission, and this pattern did not change over the first week despite a more spherical shape in non-survivors. As RBCs are the key cell for oxygen transport, this maintenance of normal deformability may contribute to the adequate microcirculatory response to severe hypoxia of the microcirculation that has been observed in these patients.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.849910 | DOI Listing |
Khirurgiia (Mosk)
September 2025
Children's City Clinical Hospital No. 9, named after G.N. Speransky, Moscow, Russia.
Background: The paper addresses an important section of pediatric combustiology - generalized meningococcal infection, associated with a severe course, the risk of disabling complications, life-threatening conditions, and high mortality.
Objective: The purpose of the study was to share the experience of treating patients with the sequelae of generalized bacterial infection caused by in a children's burn center.
Material And Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of the medical records of 23 patients treated in the burn department for babies from 0 to 3 years of the Children's City Clinical Hospital No.
mBio
September 2025
Department of Pathobiology, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Enteroinvasive bacterial pathogens are responsible for an enormous worldwide disease burden that critically affects the young and immunocompromised. is a gram-negative enteric pathogen closely related to the plague agent that colonizes intestinal tissues, induces the formation of pyogranulomas along the intestinal tract, and disseminates to systemic organs following oral infection of experimental rodents. Prior studies proposed that systemic tissues were colonized by a pool of intestinal replicating bacteria distinct from populations within Peyer's patches and mesenteric lymph nodes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Pulmonol
September 2025
Perinatal Institute, Division of Neonatology and Pulmonary Biology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA.
Objective: To wean respiratory support, preterm infants with severe respiratory failure are often administered systemic corticosteroids. We sought to evaluate if postnatal age or clinical characteristics predicted death or tracheostomy following systemic dexamethasone in evolving bronchopulmonary dysplasia.
Study Design: We performed a retrospective study of infants born at ≤ 30 weeks' gestational age cared for at a Level IV referral center from 2009 to 2019 who received a complete course of systemic dexamethasone beyond 4 weeks of age for the indication of preventing death and/or liberating from positive pressure ventilation.
Equine Vet J
September 2025
Large Animal Medicine, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA.
Background: Rhodococcus equi causes pneumonia in young foals, but disease susceptibility and severity vary. Cortisol and vitamin D modulate immune responses and cytokine production during bacterial infection, and altered concentrations are associated with sepsis in neonatal foals. We hypothesised an age and disease effect on circulating steroid hormone concentrations in foals, and that differences in cytokines and steroid hormone concentrations would predict disease severity in pneumonic foals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMedicine (Baltimore)
September 2025
Department of Ultrasound, Hangzhou Women's Hospital, Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, P. R. China.
Rationale: Sepsis following hysteroscopy is an rare complication, with current evidence suggesting that routine prophylactic antibiotic administration may not be warranted. However, this does not imply that we should disregard vigilance regarding the potential occurrence of severe infections post-hysteroscopy.
Patient Concerns: A 27-year-old female underwent hysteroscopic resection of retained products of conception after incomplete medical abortion.