Systemic infection and microglia activation: a prospective postmortem study in sepsis patients

Systemic infection is associated with long-term cognitive deficits and functional decline. In this study we hypothesized that severe systemic inflammation leads to a neuroinflammatory response that is characterized by microglial activation, and that these effects might be more pronounced in patients...

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Veröffentlicht in:Immunity & ageing 2019-07, Vol.16 (1), p.18-10, Article 18
Hauptverfasser: Westhoff, D, Engelen-Lee, J Y, Hoogland, I C M, Aronica, E M A, van Westerloo, D J, van de Beek, D, van Gool, W A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Systemic infection is associated with long-term cognitive deficits and functional decline. In this study we hypothesized that severe systemic inflammation leads to a neuroinflammatory response that is characterized by microglial activation, and that these effects might be more pronounced in patients using medication with anticholinergic side-effects. Based on the results of a pilot study in 8 patients, we assessed the number of MHC-II and CD-68 positive cells by immunohistochemistry and compared the number of microglia in specific brain regions of 16 well-characterized patients with septic shock and 15 controls. In the pilot study, patients with sepsis tended to have higher density of MHC-II and CD-68 positive microglia in the basal ganglia (putamen, caudate nucleus and globus pallidus) and of MHC-II positive microglia in the hippocampus. In the validation study, patients with sepsis had a significantly higher number of CD-68 positive cells in hippocampus (1.5 fold;  = 0.012), putamen (2.2 fold;  = 0.008) and cerebellum (2.5 fold;  = 0.011) than control patients. The density of MHC-II positive microglia was similar between sepsis and control groups. There was no consistent correlation between microglia counts and anti-cholinergic activity drugs score. In patients who die during septic shock, severe systemic inflammation is accompanied by localized and strong upregulation of CD-68 positive microglia, but not of MHC-II positive microglia. We identified regional differences in the brain with increased microglial activation in putamen, hippocampus and cerebellum.
ISSN:1742-4933
1742-4933
DOI:10.1186/s12979-019-0158-7