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Simulation & Gaming
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Computer Simulation to Study Inflammatory Response

Gary An

Cook County Hospital

Irene Anne Lee

114 West Lupita Road, Santa Fe, NM 87505-4718, USA; telephone +1 505-820-7524; fax +1 505-820-7537;lee{at}elf.org

Systemic inflammatory response syndrome and its progression to multi-organ dysfunction syndrome represent a major challenge in the field of trauma and critical care medicine. This disease state is a product of disorders of the body’s natural response to injury. Attempts to treat this at a molecular level using information from basic science research have been unsuccessful, even detrimental. It is possible that this is due to a failure to account for the nonlinear, complex nature of the inflammatory response in formulating treatment regimes. It is proposed that agent-based computer simulation may be a way to characterize the dynamics of the inflammatory response. This article presents an abstract model of a generic tissue system. Modeling the inflammatory response as a nonlinear complex system may produce simulations that will shed light on the complex nature of the inflammatory response. In the future, more sophisticated simulations may provide a testing framework for designing and evaluating treatment regimes.

Key Words: agent-based modeling • complex systems • computer simulation • critical care medicine • inflammation • medical simulation • nonlinear • pharmacology • sepsis • shock • trauma

Simulation & Gaming, Vol. 32, No. 3, 344-361 (2001)
DOI: 10.1177/104687810103200305


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