sepsis Flashcards

1
Q

Sepsis

A
  • Sepsis is a clinical syndrome that has phsyiologic, biologic, and biochemical abnormalities caused by dysregulated inflammatory response to infection.
  • A life threatening organ dysfunction caused by dysregulated host response to infection.
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2
Q

Pathophysiology of sepsis

A
  • Sepsis results when the response to infection becomes generalized and involves normal tissue remote from the site of injury.
  • Sepsis occurs when the release of proinflmmatory mediators in reponse to an infection exceeds the boundaries of the local environment, leadings to a more generalized response
    • When a similar process occurs in the response to a non-inflmmatory agent it is referred to as systemic inflammatory response syndrome
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3
Q

Systemic effects of sepsis

A
  • Widespread cellular injury may occur when the immune response becomes generalized - cellular injury is a precursor to organ dysfunction. Cellular injury is thought to be due to tissue ischemia (insufficient O2 relative to O2 needs), cytopathic injury (direct cell injury by proinflammaotry mediators and/or other products of inflammation) and an altered rate of apoptosis (in sepsis, proinflammatory cytokines and may delay apoptosis in acitvated macrophages and neutrophils - proloning the inflammaotry response and contributing to the development of multiple organ failure).
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4
Q

Organ specific effects of sepsis

A
  • Cellular injury along with release of proinflammtory and anti-inflammatory mediators often progresses to organ dysfunction. Although no organ system is protected from sepsism, some areas are more suspectible
  • Circulation
    • Hypotension due to diffuse vasodilation. Likely due to release of vasoactive mediators.
    • Reduction in systolic and diastolic ventricular performance.
    • Redution in number of functional capillaries leading to an inability to use O2 maximally.
  • Lungs
    • Endothelial injury to pulmonary vasculature during sepsis distrubs capilaary blood flow and icnreases microvascular permeability, resulting in interstitial and alveolar pulmonary edema (results in V/Q mismatch and hypoxemia). Can manifest as ARDS
  • GI tract
    • Circulatory abnormalities of typical sepsis may depress the gut’s normal barrier function allowing movement of the bacteria and endotoxin into the system circulation, extending the septic response.
  • Kidney
    • Sepsis is often accompanied by AKI. One mechansim of this is acute tubular necrosis due to hypoperfusion and/or hypoxemia.
  • Nervous system
    • CNS complications are frequent in septic patients. Most common CNS complications are encephalopathy.
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5
Q

Disease severity sepsis

A
  • Sepsis exists on a continuum of severity ranging from infection and bacteremia to sepsis and septic shock, that can ultimately leads to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and death.
    *
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6
Q

qSOFA

A
  • Critieria for early sepsis. Score ≥ 2 is associated with poor outcome due to sepsis.
    • RR ≥ 22 - due to metabolic acidosis (lactate), hypoxemia, and fever (using convective mechanisms to try to cool down)
    • Altered mental status
    • Systolic blood pressure ( ≤ 100 mmHg)
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7
Q

Septic shock

A
  • A type of vasodilatory or distributive shock. Defined as sepsis that has circulatory cellular and metabolic abnormalities.
    • Includes patients who fulfill criteria for sepsis and who despite proper fluid resuscitatio require vasopressors to maintain a mean arterial pressure ≥ 65mmHg and have lacate > 2 mmol/L
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8
Q

Clinical Presentation Septic Shock

A
  • Symptoms and signs specific to an infectious source
  • Arterial hypotension (SBP <90mmHg)
  • Temperature > 38.3 or < 36
  • Heart rate >90beats/min
  • Tachypnea - RR >20
  • Signs of end organ perfusion - warm, flushed skin in early phases; cool skin due to redirection of blood flow to core organs in shock; decreased cap refill, cyanosis, altered metnal status, oliguria, absent bowel sounds
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9
Q

Management of Septic Shock

A
  1. Securing airway, correcting hypoxemia, and establishing venous access for the early administration of fluids and antibiotics
  2. Stabilize respiration - supplemental O2 should be given. Intubation an mechanical ventilation may be requried.
  3. Initial investigations:
    • CBC, liver function tests, coagulation studies
    • Serum lactate - elevated serum lactate may indicate the severity of sepsis
    • Arterial blood gas - may reveal acidosis, hypoxemia, or hypercapnia
    • Peripheral blood cultures (from at least 2 different sites), urinalysis, and microbiologic cultures
    • Imaging at suspected site of infection
  4. Initial Resuscitative therapy
    • Rapid restoration of perfusion and early administration of antibiotics
      • Tissue perfusion is achieved by aggressive administration of IV fluids (either crystalloids or saline)
  5. Vasopressors - IV vasopressors are used in patients who remain hypotensive despite adequate fluid resuscitation or who develop cardiogenic pulmonary edema.
    • Generally use norepinephrine as the first-line agent in septic shock
  6. Patients who respond to therapy - once patients respond to therapy attention should be directed towards continuing to control the sepsis and de-escalation of fluids and antibiotics
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