shwartzman reaction
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2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (13) ◽  
pp. 3260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manabu Kinoshita ◽  
Masahiro Nakashima ◽  
Hiroyuki Nakashima ◽  
Shuhji Seki

In recent decades, the elderly population has been rapidly increasing in many countries. Such patients are susceptible to Gram-negative septic shock, namely endotoxin shock. Mortality due to endotoxin shock remains high despite recent advances in medical care. The generalized Shwartzman reaction is well recognized as an experimental endotoxin shock. Aged mice are similarly susceptible to the generalized Shwartzman reaction and show an increased mortality accompanied by the enhanced production of tumor necrosis factor (TNF). Consistent with the findings in the murine model, the in vitro Shwartzman reaction-like response is also age-dependently augmented in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells, as assessed by enhanced TNF production. Interestingly, age-dependently increased innate lymphocytes with T cell receptor-that intermediate expression, such as that of CD8+CD122+T cells in mice and CD57+T cells in humans, may collaborate with macrophages and induce the exacerbation of the Shwartzman reaction in elderly individuals. However, endotoxin tolerance in mice, which resembles a mirror phenomenon of the generalized Shwartzman reaction, drastically reduces the TNF production of macrophages while strongly activating their bactericidal activity in infection. Importantly, this effect can be induced in aged mice. The safe induction of endotoxin tolerance may be a potential therapeutic strategy for refractory septic shock in elderly patients.



Author(s):  
V. B. Katsupeev ◽  
B. G. Rozin ◽  
R. E. Astakhov ◽  
A. P. Lysenko ◽  
R. L. Karagezyan ◽  
...  

Occurrence of the Arthus and Shwartzman reaction leading to an extensive necrotizing phlegmon of the body after constant intravenous infusions of protein preparations used to correct metabolic disturbances in a newborn with partial congenital duodenal compression. The outcome was successful due to a complex therapy, including multiple skin insections with necrectomy, autografting and hemofltration, laparotomy with duodenojejunostomy for duodenal membrane.



2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (8) ◽  
pp. 466-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
Abdullah B Chahin ◽  
Jason M Opal ◽  
Steven M Opal

Ninety years ago, Gregory Shwartzman first reported an unusual discovery following the intradermal injection of sterile culture filtrates from principally Gram-negative strains from bacteria into normal rabbits. If this priming dose was followed in 24 h by a second intravenous challenge (the provocative dose) from same culture filtrate, dermal necrosis at the first injection site would regularly occur. This peculiar, but highly reproducible, event fascinated the microbiologists, hematologists, and immunologists of the time, who set out to determine the mechanisms that underlie the pathogenesis of this reaction. The speed of this reaction seemed to rule out an adaptive, humoral, immune response as its cause. Histopathologic material from within the necrotic center revealed fibrinoid, thrombo-hemorrhagic necrosis within small arterioles and capillaries in the micro-circulation. These pathologic features bore a striking resemblance to a more generalized coagulopathic phenomenon following two repeated endotoxin injections described 4 yr earlier by Sanarelli. This reaction came to be known as the generalized Shwartzman phenomenon, while the dermal reaction was named the localized or dermal Shwartzman reaction. A third category was later added, called the single organ or mono-visceral form of the Shwartzman phenomenon. The occasional occurrence of typical pathological features of the generalized Shwartzman reaction limited to a single organ is notable in many well-known clinical events (e.g., hyper-acute kidney transplant rejection, fulminant hepatic necrosis, or adrenal apoplexy in Waterhouse-Fredrickson syndrome). We will briefly review the history and the significant insights gained from understanding this phenomenon regarding the circuitry and control mechanisms responsible for disseminated intravascular coagulation, the vasculopathy and the immunopathy of sepsis.





2013 ◽  
Vol 41 (12) ◽  
pp. e447-e456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antje Butschkau ◽  
Philipp Nagel ◽  
Eberhard Grambow ◽  
Dietmar Zechner ◽  
George J. Broze ◽  
...  








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