Publications by authors named "Barrios E"

Article Synopsis
  • Sepsis leads to systemic immune issues and organ failure, often resulting in severe brain disability, with young females showing better recovery than males.
  • Using a mouse model, researchers found that after experiencing sepsis, both male and female mice showed weight regain and reduced gut microbiome diversity, but males displayed more significant immune changes and brain inflammation.
  • fMRI analysis highlighted that while both sexes experienced similar changes in certain brain areas, male mice had altered connectivity patterns suggesting a delayed recovery process compared to females, indicating a complex, sex-dependent response to sepsis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Despite continued improvement in post-sepsis survival, long term morbidity and mortality remain high. Chronic critical illness (CCI), defined as persistent inflammation and organ injury requiring prolonged intensive care, is a harbinger of poor long-term outcomes in sepsis survivors. Current dogma states that sepsis survivors are immunosuppressed, particularly in CCI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Prenatal Zika virus (ZIKV) infection leads to microcephaly and adverse neurodevelopment. The effects of postnatal ZIKV infection on the developing brain are unknown. We assessed the neurodevelopmental outcomes of children exposed postnatally during the ZIKV epidemic.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Sepsis is a complex clinical syndrome characterized by a heterogenous host immune response. Historically, static protein and transcriptomic metrics have been employed to describe the underlying biology. Here, we tested the hypothesis that functional TNF expression as well as an immunologic endotype based on both IFNγ and TNF expression could be used to model clinical outcomes in sepsis patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Microencapsulation of pristine core liquids in polymer shells has critical applications in thermal energy storage and management, targeted drug delivery, and carbon capture, among others. Herein, we report a novel encapsulation approach based on a double emulsion soft-template to produce microcapsules comprised of an ionic liquid (IL) core in a degradable polymer shell. We demonstrate the production of [IL-in-oil]-in-oil (IL/O/O) double emulsions, in which the oil interphase (O) contains a CO-derived polycarbonate bearing vinyl pendant groups, tetrathiol small molecule crosslinker, and photoinitiator; upon irradiation of the double emulsion under low shear, thiol-ene crosslinking of the loaded species results in the formation of a robust shell around the pure IL droplets.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Sarcopenia, which is the loss of muscle mass, is worsened by factors like aging and severe trauma, leading to complications in older adults during hospitalization.
  • A study involving 47 older adults after severe blunt trauma showed that skeletal muscle mass decreased significantly over a six-month period, with the incidence of sarcopenia increasing from 36% to 60%.
  • Although the trauma caused temporary declines in physical performance and quality of life, these effects were reversible, returning to baseline levels within six months, indicating that a deeper understanding of sarcopenia and its long-term impacts is needed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of combining hypertonic saline solution (HSS) with furosemide in treating patients with worsening heart failure, focusing on potential improvements in diuretic response in an outpatient setting.
  • The results showed no significant difference in short-term diuresis or natriuresis between the two treatment groups; however, the Furosemide-HSS group had slightly decreased weight after 7 days.
  • Overall, the combination therapy did not lead to better outcomes in terms of congestion or kidney function compared to furosemide alone, suggesting it may not be beneficial in this context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Enhanced critical care delivery has led to improved survival rates in critically ill patients, yet sepsis remains a leading cause of multiorgan failure with variable recovery outcomes. Chronic critical illness, characterised by prolonged ICU stays and persistent end-organ dysfunction, presents a significant challenge in patient management, often requiring multifaceted interventions. Recent research, highlighted in a comprehensive review in the British Journal of Anaesthesia, focuses on addressing the pathophysiological drivers of chronic critical illness, such as persistent inflammation, immunosuppression, and catabolism, through targeted therapeutic strategies including immunomodulation, muscle wasting prevention, nutritional support, and microbiome modulation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report a management strategy for disseminated Fusarium solani fungal infection in an adult 35% total body surface area burn patient with brain abscesses and concomitant pulmonic valve endocarditis resulting in the longest survival reported in a burn patient. Early in his hospital course, the patient was diagnosed with a Fusarium burn wound infection with concomitant fungemia and was treated with a prolonged course of intravenous (IV) antifungal monotherapy. Shortly thereafter, he developed focal neurologic deficits and was found to have brain abscesses on MRI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Sepsis leads to specific immune system changes, particularly the increase of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), which help control inflammation but can linger in those with ongoing critical illness.
  • The study employs advanced techniques like Cellular Indexing of Transcriptomes and Epitopes by Sequencing to analyze MDSC types based on gene expression and biological functions.
  • Findings reveal a new lineage and differentiation pathway for MDSCs following sepsis, emphasizing their variable responses related to patient outcomes and demonstrating their ability to change, contradicting the previous belief of a fixed lineage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Postsepsis early mortality is being replaced by survivors who experience either a rapid recovery and favorable hospital discharge or the development of chronic critical illness with suboptimal outcomes. The underlying immunological response that determines these clinical trajectories remains poorly defined at the transcriptomic level. As classical and nonclassical monocytes are key leukocytes in both the innate and adaptive immune systems, we sought to delineate the transcriptomic response of these cell types.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present soft-template encapsulation of salt hydrate phase change materials (PCMs) using modified silica particles to both stabilize emulsions and serve as initiators for organocatalyzed photoredox ATRP. The resulting core-shell structures have high core loading and are robust to thermal cycling. Critically, this strategy eliminates the need for a reagent in the core phase, thus preserving purity, and offers the ability to tailor shell composition for desired applications.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: Hypertonic saline solution (HSS) plus intravenous (IV) loop diuretic appears to enhance the diuretic response in patients hospitalized for heart failure (HF). The efficacy and safety of this therapy in the ambulatory setting have not been evaluated. We aimed to describe the design and baseline characteristics of the SALT-HF trial participants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: Severe trauma disrupts bone marrow function and is associated with persistent anemia and altered hematopoiesis. Previously, plasma-derived exosomes isolated after trauma have been shown to suppress in vitro bone marrow function. However, the cargo contained in these vesicles has not been examined.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

BACKGROUNDSepsis remains a major clinical challenge for which successful treatment requires greater precision in identifying patients at increased risk of adverse outcomes requiring different therapeutic approaches. Predicting clinical outcomes and immunological endotyping of septic patients generally relies on using blood protein or mRNA biomarkers, or static cell phenotyping. Here, we sought to determine whether functional immune responsiveness would yield improved precision.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Sepsis remains a major clinical challenge for which successful treatment requires greater precision in identifying patients at increased risk of adverse outcomes requiring different therapeutic approaches. Predicting clinical outcomes and immunological endotyping of septic patients has generally relied on using blood protein or mRNA biomarkers, or static cell phenotyping. Here, we sought to determine whether functional immune responsiveness would yield improved precision.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

With the implementation of new intensive care unit (ICU) therapies in the 1970s, multiple organ failure (MOF) emerged as a fulminant inflammatory phenotype leading to early ICU death. Over the ensuing decades, with fundamental advances in care, this syndrome has evolved into a lingering phenotype of chronic critical illness (CCI) leading to indolent late post-hospital discharge death. In 2012, the University of Florida (UF) Sepsis Critical Illness Research Center (SCIRC) coined the term (PICS) to provide a mechanistic framework to study CCI in surgical patients.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Despite offering free-of-charge COVID-19 vaccines starting July 2021, Guatemala has one of the lowest vaccination rates in Latin America. From 28 September 2021 to 11 April 2022, we conducted a cross-sectional survey of community members, adapting a CDC questionnaire to evaluate COVID-19 vaccine access and hesitancy. Of 233 participants ≥ 12 years, 127 (55%) received ≥1 dose of COVID-19 and 4 (2%) reported prior COVID-19 illness.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Contagion arising from clustering of multiple time series like those in the stock market indicators can further complicate the nature of volatility, rendering a parametric test (relying on asymptotic distribution) to suffer from issues on size and power. We propose a test on volatility based on the bootstrap method for multiple time series, intended to account for possible presence of contagion effect. While the test is fairly robust to distributional assumptions, it depends on the nature of volatility.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sexual dimorphisms exist in multiple domains, from learning and memory to neurocognitive disease, and even in the immune system. Male sex has been associated with increased susceptibility to infection, as well as increased risk of adverse outcomes. Sepsis remains a major source of morbidity and mortality globally, and over half of septic patients admitted to intensive care are believed to suffer some degree of sepsis-associated encephalopathy (SAE).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Ergonomic development and awareness are critical to the long-term health and well-being of surgeons. Work-related musculoskeletal disorders affect an overwhelming majority of surgeons, and various operative modalities (open, laparoscopic, and robotic surgery) differentially affect the musculoskeletal system. Previous reviews have addressed various aspects of surgical ergonomic history or methods of ergonomic assessment, but the purpose of this study is to synthesize ergonomic analysis by surgical modality while discussing future directions of the field based on current perioperative interventions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Intestinal non-rotation is an exceedingly rare clinical entity, especially as the etiology for small bowel obstruction following open-heart surgery in an elderly patient. Perisplenitis (also known as "sugar spleen") is also rarely identified during exploratory laparotomy, and is more often encountered post-mortem due to its benign disease course. These two entities were encountered in the same acutely decompensating patient, and while unrelated, serve as a reminder of the importance of recognizing variations in anatomy and understanding subsequent clinical significance.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF