sepsis is characterised by a
life-threatening organ dysfunction due to a dysregulated host response to infection and inflammation
septic shock
’ persistent hypotension despite fluid resuscitation’
a subset of sepsis where particularly profound circulatory, cellular and metabolic abnormalities substantially increase mortality
why are definitions of sepsis important?
why is sepsis important?
what happens in local infection
rubor tumor calor dolor
rubor
redness
tumor
swelling
calor
heat
dolor
pain
sepsis is
systemic inflammation
what happens in sepsis
sign of vasodilation
warm peripheries
purpose of capillary leakage
WBC to site of infection
sign of capillary leakage
swelling- may appear oedematous
amplification involves
upregulation of cytokines and mediator molecules
the thinking about sepsis’ effect on organ systems
think: ABCD
Airway
o No specific effect unless infection arises from throat or neck. However, decreased consciousness may be at risk of airway problem
Breathing
o Raised respiratory rate (tachypnoea). Fluids and proteins leaking into interstitial tissues lead to lung oedema and decreased lung compliance.
circulation
o Hypovolaemia due to vasodilatation and capillary leakage leading to hypotension
hypovolaemia leads to
(think of blood pressure = CO x TPR) - tachycardia - end organ damage (ischaemia- hypo perfusion of organs)
why is no urine output a sign?
due to hypo-perfusion of the kidney - due to hypovolaemia
disability
o Reduced blood flow to brain. May present as confusion, drowsiness, slurred speech, agitation, anxiety or decreased level of consciousness.
Exposure
o High temperature due to hypothalamic response to infection. o Beware hypothermia ( < 36°C) especially in elderly (don’t have same response as young- so sick cant mount temp response)
who is at risk of Sepsis