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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Alverdy, John
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overview John Alverdy, MD, has run a continuously funded NIH-funded laboratory that studies the molecular interactions of bacteria and the intestinal mucosa in order to understand how life-threatening infections arise after trauma and major surgery and during critical illness. He has developed several anti-infective polymer-based compounds that can attenuate the virulence of several multi-drug resistant pathogens that cause life threatening infections in surgical patients and works with the IME to synthesize, refine, and scale the compounds for pre-clinical testing. The Alverdy lab seeks to better understand the regulation of virulence expression among potential pathogens through investigating the characteristics of the microbial context, molecular machinery that senses that context, and ultimately the lethal combinations of virulence expression that leads to disease. The majority of our work has focused on the sense and response virulence mechanisms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a well characterized and clinically important pathogen. We have shown a remarkable potential for this organisms to respond to host environmental cues related to stress, ischemia, immune activation and nutrient depletion. With this core model of environmental regulation of virulence expression, we are pursuing applications in intestinal transplantation, anastomotic and radiation physiology, necrotizing enterocolitis and ischemia/reperfusion injury. We are also investigating similar sense and response mechanisms in other clinically important organisms, including Staphylococcus aureus and Candida albicans. Finally, we are interested in developing virulence-based therapies to prevent virulence activation through modifications in microenvironment of the stressed host such as phosphate repletion and polymer-mediated mucosal replacement therapies. The ultimate goal of understanding microbial virulence is to provide clinical tools to improve the care of patients. However the complexity of the host-pathogen interaction and the vast amounts of mechanistic information available constitutes a formidable barrier to translational research. Computational agent based modeling is a well suited to dynamically represent mechanistic detail in a modifiable context to recapitulate cellular behavior at the tissue, organ and patient levels.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Alverdy, John
Item TypeName
Concept Abdominal Injuries
Concept Radiation Injuries, Experimental
Concept Surgical Wound Infection
Concept Wound Infection
Concept Wounds, Gunshot
Concept Wounds, Nonpenetrating
Concept Reperfusion Injury
Concept Acute Lung Injury
Concept Trauma Centers
Concept Wounds and Injuries
Concept Wounds, Penetrating
Concept Wound Healing
Concept Myocardial Reperfusion Injury
Concept Carotid Artery Injuries
Concept Acute Kidney Injury
Academic Article Influence of the critically ill state on host-pathogen interactions within the intestine: gut-derived sepsis redefined.
Academic Article Depletion of intestinal phosphate after operative injury activates the virulence of P aeruginosa causing lethal gut-derived sepsis.
Academic Article Oral PEG 15-20 protects the intestine against radiation: role of lipid rafts.
Academic Article Surgical injury and metabolic stress enhance the virulence of the human opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa.
Academic Article Carotid-esophageal fistula following a penetrating neck injury: case report.
Academic Article Pseudomonas aeruginosa potentiates the lethal effect of intestinal ischemia-reperfusion injury: the role of in vivo virulence activation.
Academic Article Integration of TGF-ß- and EGFR-based signaling pathways using an agent-based model of epithelial restitution.
Academic Article Intestinal tissues induce an SNP mutation in Pseudomonas aeruginosa that enhances its virulence: possible role in anastomotic leak.
Academic Article High-molecular-weight polyethylene glycol protects cardiac myocytes from hypoxia- and reoxygenation-induced cell death and preserves ventricular function.
Academic Article Mortality in retroperitoneal hematoma.
Academic Article Temporary loss of limb function secondary to soft tissue calcification in a patient with rhabdomyolysis-induced acute renal failure.
Academic Article Protective effects of high-molecular weight polyethylene glycol (PEG) in human lung endothelial cell barrier regulation: role of actin cytoskeletal rearrangement.
Academic Article Hepatitis prevalence in trauma patients.
Academic Article The intestinal environment of surgical injury transforms Pseudomonas aeruginosa into a discrete hypervirulent morphotype capable of causing lethal peritonitis.
Academic Article Intestinal anastomotic injury alters spatially defined microbiome composition and function.
Academic Article The opposing forces of the intestinal microbiome and the emerging pathobiome.
Academic Article Pseudomonas aeruginosa wound infection involves activation of its iron acquisition system in response to fascial contact.
Academic Article The Shift of an Intestinal "Microbiome" to a "Pathobiome" Governs the Course and Outcome of Sepsis Following Surgical Injury.
Academic Article Prevention of Perioperative Anastomotic Healing Complications: Anastomotic Stricture and Anastomotic Leak.
Academic Article Morphine Promotes Colonization of Anastomotic Tissues with Collagenase - Producing Enterococcus faecalis and Causes Leak.
Academic Article The gut microbiota and gastrointestinal surgery.
Academic Article Lack of evidence for tissue hypoxia as a contributing factor in anastomotic leak following colon anastomosis and segmental devascularization in rats.
Academic Article Modeling Acinetobacter baumannii wound infections: The critical role of iron.
Academic Article The gut microbiome and the mechanism of surgical infection.
Academic Article Can Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus Silently Travel From the Gut to the Wound and Cause Postoperative Infection? Modeling the "Trojan Horse Hypothesis".
Academic Article Smoking and Postoperative Surgical Site Infection: Where There's Smoke, There's Fire.
Academic Article Optimum Operating Room Environment for the Prevention of Surgical Site Infections.
Academic Article Ionic Modulation of Bacterial Virulence and Its Role in Surgical Infection.
Academic Article The wound environment, microbial virulence and postoperative infection: Practical lessons for the surgeon.
Academic Article Identification of Collagenolytic Bacteria in Human Samples: Screening Methods and Clinical Implications for Resolving and Preventing Anastomotic Leaks and Wound Complications.
Academic Article Enterococcus faecalis exploits the human fibrinolytic system to drive excess collagenolysis: implications in gut healing and identification of druggable targets.
Academic Article Low-fat/high-fibre diet prehabilitation improves anastomotic healing via the microbiome: an experimental model.
Academic Article Re-examining causes of surgical site infections following elective surgery in the era of asepsis.
Academic Article The Biology of Anastomotic Healing-the Unknown Overwhelms the Known.
Academic Article Surgical site infections following elective surgery - Authors' reply.
Academic Article Emerging Paradigms in the Prevention of Surgical Site Infection: The Patient Microbiome and Antimicrobial Resistance.
Academic Article A Novel Nonantibiotic Gut-directed Strategy to Prevent Surgical Site Infections.
Academic Article Updates in Prevention of Surgical Site Infection: Reply.
Concept Surgical Wound
Grant Gut pathogen virulence and its therapeutic modulation during surgical injury
Academic Article Studies Involving Surgical Site Infections (SSIs) Without Culture Results, the Antibiotics Chosen for Prophylaxis and Antibiotic Sensitivity Data: "Are they Actionable?"
Academic Article What Is the Role of the Gut in Wound Infections?
Academic Article Social determinants of health, the microbiome, and surgical injury.
Academic Article Where do the pathogens that cause surgical site infections come from?
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  • Wounds and Injuries