The Gut in Critical Illness

Curr Gastroenterol Rep. 2025 Dec;27(1):1-9. doi: 10.1007/s11894-024-00954-4. Epub 2025 Jan 10.

Abstract

Purpose of review: The purpose of this narrative review is to describe the mechanisms for gut dysfunction during critical illness, outline hypotheses of gut-derived inflammation, and identify nutrition and non-nutritional therapies that have direct and indirect effects on preserving both epithelial barrier function and gut microbiota during critical illness.

Recent findings: Clinical and animal model studies have demonstrated that critical illness pathophysiology and interventions breach epithelial barrier function and convert a normally commensal gut microbiome into a pathobiome. As a result, the gut has been postulated to be the "motor" of critical illness and numerous hypotheses have been put forward to explain how it contributes to systemic inflammation and drives multiple organ failure. Strategies to ameliorate gut dysfunction have focused on maintaining gut barrier function and promoting gut microbiota commensalism. The trajectory of critical illness may be closely related to gut epithelial barrier function, the gut microbiome and interventions that may contribute towards a deleterious pathobiome with immune dysregulation.

Keywords: Critical illness; Enteral nutrition; Gut barrier function; Inflammation; Microbiome; Parenteral nutrition.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Critical Illness* / therapy
  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome* / physiology
  • Humans
  • Intestinal Mucosa / microbiology