Simulating the clinical manifestations and disease progression of human sepsis: A monobacterial injection approach for animal modeling.
Xuanwen RuSimiao ChenDanlei ChenQingyi ShaoWenxia ShaoQing YePublished in: Virulence (2024)
Sepsis is defined as life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection, with great clinical heterogeneity, high morbidity, and high mortality. At the same time, there are many kinds of infection sources, the pathophysiology is very complex, and the pathogenesis has not been fully elucidated. An ideal animal model of sepsis can accurately simulate clinical sepsis and promote the development of sepsis-related pathogenesis, treatment methods, and prognosis. The existing sepsis model still uses the previous Sepsis 2.0 modelling standard, which has some problems, such as many kinds of infection sources, poor repeatability, inability to take into account single-factor studies, and large differences from clinical sepsis patients. To solve these problems, this study established a new animal model of sepsis. The model uses intravenous tail injection of a single bacterial strain, simplifying the complexity of multibacterial infection, and effectively solving the above problems.