Endotoxin and Endotoxemia
- 14 June 1973
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 288 (24), 1297-1298
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197306142882411
Abstract
Endotoxins — lipopolysaccharides that form a portion of the cell walls of gram-negative bacteria — cause alterations of blood coagulation, complement and kallikrein, and often hypotension and death in a variety of laboratory animals.1 Endotoxin has been considered a likely cause of some of the pathophysiological alterations that often lead to death of patients with bacteremia due to gram-negative organisms. However, proof that endotoxin actually produces these effects in man is lacking. In addition, a test sensitive enough to detect endotoxin in blood or other body fluids has not been available in the past, and gram-negative sepsis has been equated . . .Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- GermsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1972
- Gram-Negative Sepsis: Detection of Endotoxemia with the Limulus TestAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1972
- Detection of Endotoxin in the Blood of Patients with Sepsis Due to Gram-Negative BacteriaNew England Journal of Medicine, 1970
- Endotoxins and the Immune ResponsePublished by Springer Nature ,1969
- Some Relationships among Hemostasis, Fibrinolytic Phenomena, Immunity, and the Inflammatory ResponseAdvances in Immunology, 1969