What is the significance of sepsis?
What are the factors contributing to the increasing incidence of sepsis?
What is the mortality/morbidity of sepsis?
What is bacteremia?
What is sepsis?
-confirmed or clinical evidence of infection plus evidence of a systemic response
What is severe sepsis?
-sepsis with associated organ dysfunction with one or more of the following: hypotension, confusion, oliguria, hypoxia (not explained by primary respiratory disease), metabolic lactic acidosis, DIC, hepatic dysfunction (not explained by primary liver disease)
What is septic shock?
-sepsis-associated hypotension that is associated with lactic acidosis or organ hypoperfusion and cannot be reversed by the administration of IV fluids
What is SIRS?
What is a cytokine storm?
-SIRS can be considered a subset of cytokine storm, a general term for cytokine dysregulation
What is the disease continuium of sepsis?
-the spectrum range from initially as SIRS to sepsis (bacteremia with SIRS) then to severe sepsis (sepsis with signs of organ system failure) then to septic shock (sepsis induced hypothension despite adequate fluid resuscitation leading to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome
What are the clinical features of sepsis?
What is TLRs role in SIRS?
What is gram negative shock?
What is inflammation-activated coagulation?
What is the role of activated protein C?
What is transient bacteremia?
What is intermittent bacteremia?
What is continuous bacteremia?
- during early stages of specific infections: typhoid dever, brucellosis, leptospirosis
What is intravascular vs extravascular?
- extravascular- bacteria enter the bloodstream through the lymphatic system from another site of infection
What are examples of intravascular infections?
What is infective endocarditis?
What is the pathogenesis of infective endocarditis?
What do infective endocarditis lesions look like?
What is a mycotic aneurysm?