Personalized physiological medicine

Abstract This paper introduces the concept of personalized physiological medicine that is specifically directed at the needs of the critically ill patient. This differs from the conventional view of personalized medicine, characterized by biomarkers and gene profiling, instead focusing on time-varia...

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Main Author: Can Ince
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-12-01
Series:Critical Care
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-017-1907-7
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spelling doaj-7838e3279ef947f2aaaedaac01279bf12020-11-24T20:52:52ZengBMCCritical Care1364-85352017-12-0121S3273310.1186/s13054-017-1907-7Personalized physiological medicineCan Ince0Department of Intensive Care, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center RotterdamAbstract This paper introduces the concept of personalized physiological medicine that is specifically directed at the needs of the critically ill patient. This differs from the conventional view of personalized medicine, characterized by biomarkers and gene profiling, instead focusing on time-variant changes in the pathophysiology and regulation of various organ systems and their cellular and subcellular constituents. I propose that personalized physiological medicine is composed of four pillars relevant to the critically ill patient. Pillar 1 is defined by the frailty and fitness of the patient and their physiological reserve to cope with the stress of critical illness and therapy. Pillar 2 involves monitoring of the key physiological variables of the different organ systems and their response to disease and therapy. Pillar 3 concerns the evaluation of the success of resuscitation by assessment of the hemodynamic coherence between the systemic and microcirculation and parenchyma of the organ systems. Finally, pillar 4 is defined by the integration of the physiological and clinical data into a time-learning adaptive model of the patient to provide feedback about the function of organ systems and to guide and assess the response to disease and therapy. I discuss each pillar and describe the challenges to research and development that will allow the realization of personalized physiological medicine to be practiced at the bedside for critically ill patients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-017-1907-7
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Can Ince
spellingShingle Can Ince
Personalized physiological medicine
Critical Care
author_facet Can Ince
author_sort Can Ince
title Personalized physiological medicine
title_short Personalized physiological medicine
title_full Personalized physiological medicine
title_fullStr Personalized physiological medicine
title_full_unstemmed Personalized physiological medicine
title_sort personalized physiological medicine
publisher BMC
series Critical Care
issn 1364-8535
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract This paper introduces the concept of personalized physiological medicine that is specifically directed at the needs of the critically ill patient. This differs from the conventional view of personalized medicine, characterized by biomarkers and gene profiling, instead focusing on time-variant changes in the pathophysiology and regulation of various organ systems and their cellular and subcellular constituents. I propose that personalized physiological medicine is composed of four pillars relevant to the critically ill patient. Pillar 1 is defined by the frailty and fitness of the patient and their physiological reserve to cope with the stress of critical illness and therapy. Pillar 2 involves monitoring of the key physiological variables of the different organ systems and their response to disease and therapy. Pillar 3 concerns the evaluation of the success of resuscitation by assessment of the hemodynamic coherence between the systemic and microcirculation and parenchyma of the organ systems. Finally, pillar 4 is defined by the integration of the physiological and clinical data into a time-learning adaptive model of the patient to provide feedback about the function of organ systems and to guide and assess the response to disease and therapy. I discuss each pillar and describe the challenges to research and development that will allow the realization of personalized physiological medicine to be practiced at the bedside for critically ill patients.
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13054-017-1907-7
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