U of S researchers’ new discovery may help protect against sepsis
Sepsis is the most common cause of death in hospital intensive-care units around the world, but a new discovery by researchers at the University of Saskatchewan could help improve outcomes for those patients.
Dr. Scott Widenmaier, an associate professor of anatomy, physiology and pharmacology at the university’s college of medicine, has “zeroed in on a specific protein that might be key to helping the body fight back against the potentially life-threatening condition,” the university said on Friday.
Manipulating the protein could offer a new method to protect patients from sepsis, which occurs when an immune system response to an infection causes damage to the body.
“Sepsis can cause damage to organs like the heart, kidney, and lungs,” Widenmaier said in a statement.


