Abstract

Sepsis is at present one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality in the neonatal population. Together with inflammation, oxidative stress is involved in detrimental pathways activated during neonatal sepsis, eventually leading to organ dysfunction and death. The redox cascade during sepsis is mainly initiated by IL-6 and IL-8 stimulation in newborns and includes multiple noxious processes, as direct cell damage induced by reactive oxygen species, activation of gene expression leading to amplification of inflammation and oxidative stress, and impairment of mitochondrial function. Once proinflammatory and prooxidant pathways are established as stimulated by causing pathogens, self-maintaining unfavorable redox cycles ensue, leading to oxidative stress-related cellular damage, independently from the activating pathogens themselves. Despite antioxidant systems are induced during neonatal sepsis, as an adaptive response to an increased oxidative burden, a condition of redox imbalance favoring oxidative pathways occurs, resulting in increased markers of oxidative stress damage. Therefore, antioxidant treatment would exert beneficial effects during neonatal sepsis, potentially interrupting prooxidant pathways and preventing the maintenance of detrimental redox cycles that cannot be directly affected by antibiotic treatment. Among others, antioxidant agents investigated in clinical settings as adjunct treatment for neonatal sepsis include melatonin and pentoxifylline, both showing promising results, while novel antioxidant molecules, as edaravone and endothelin receptor antagonists, are at present under investigation in animal models. Finally, mitochondria-targeted antioxidant treatments could represent an interesting line of research in the treatment of neonatal sepsis.

Highlights

  • Despite general improvement in intensive care of acutely ill newborns, sepsis is still among the leading causes of death in the neonatal population worldwide [1]

  • In 15 preterm newborns, serum lactoferrin levels were significantly lower in patients with proven sepsis in comparison to those with clinical sepsis and were positively correlated with white blood cell count or absolute neutrophil count, suggesting that the lowest lactoferrin observed in more immature infants is likely related to suboptimal white cell activity and that lactoferrin supplementation could be effective in this population [110]

  • Most of the studies assessing antioxidant enzyme activity in neonatal sepsis were based on serum measurements that could be influenced by hemolysis processes and provided partially different evidences in comparison to observations based on erythrocyte level measurements [68]

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Summary

Introduction

Despite general improvement in intensive care of acutely ill newborns, sepsis is still among the leading causes of death in the neonatal population worldwide [1]. According to the guidelines of the International Pediatric Sepsis Consensus Conference, neonatal sepsis is defined as a clinical syndrome characterized by the presence of both infection and systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) [4, 5]. It is at present widely accepted that the infective insult due to the invasion of sterile tissues by pathogens merely represents the initiation of sepsis, while the process leading to the sepsis syndrome is subsequently maintained by a cascade of inflammatory and oxidative mechanisms that, once activated, act independently from the presence of the pathogens themselves [6]. The redox cascade initiated by immune activation includes generation of consistent amount of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS), activation of DNA transcription processes, and mitochondrial functional impairment, eventually leading to multiple organ dysfunction and death [8, 9]

Redox Status in Neonatal Sepsis
Antioxidant Strategies in Neonatal Sepsis
Interventional procedure
Interventional procedures
Conclusions

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