Sepsis: Difference between revisions

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== Medical Management  ==
== Medical Management  ==
{{#ev:youtube|watch?v=OgQ6avlpBRY}}
Below guidelines are derived from the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines
Medical management is vital to prevent further inflammatory response.<ref name=":0" /> This is normally done by means of ventilatory and haemodynamic support. Treatment is aimed at controlling the cause of infection and restoring haemodynamic homeostasis.<ref name=":1" /> The key to improved outcomes is in early identification and appropriate management thereof in the initial hours after onset.<ref name=":2">Rhodes A, Evans LE, Alhazzani W, Levy MM, Antonelli M, Ferrer R, Kumar A, Sevransky JE, Sprung CL, Nunnally ME, Rochwerg B. [https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%252Fs00134-017-4683-6.pdf Surviving sepsis campaign: international guidelines for management of sepsis and septic shock: 2016.] Intensive care medicine 2017;43(3):304-77.</ref> 
# Source Control
 
* Broad-spectrum antibiotics within one hour of diagnosis for all patients. Initial empiric anti-infective therapy should have activity against all likely pathogens and adequate penetration of source tissue.
'''Aims'''<ref name=":0" />
* Removal of infected/necrotic tissue, if it is the source of septic shock, i.e. patients with cellulitis, abscess, infected devices, purulent wounds.
* Restoration of normal haemostasis
2. Management of Shock  
* Sustain tissue perfusion
* Measures most effective if achieved within the first six hours of diagnosis
* Avoid focusing on a single system
* Restore central venous pressure (CVP) to 8 mmHg to 12 mmHg
* Maintain oxygen delivery
* Restore mean arterial pressure (MAP) greater than 65 mmHg
** Respiratory support
* Restore superior vena cava saturation to 70% or mixed venous saturation to 65%
** Inotropic support
* Fluid resuscitation with crystalloid (NS or albumin) and colloid (blood products) up to 80 ml/kg
** Vasodilators
* Mechanical ventilation to reduce metabolic demand
* Keeping pH > 7.35
* First-line vasoactive agents (epinephrine in cold shock versus norepinephrine in warm shock) when fluid-refractory Note: dopamine as a first-line agent has fallen out of favor.
 
3. Enhancing Host Response
'''Control infection source'''<ref name=":1" /> 
* [[Corticosteroids in the Management of Rheumatoid Arthritis|Corticosteroids]] indicated in vasoactive-refractory shock and or in patients with low (unstimulated) basal cortisol levels less than 150 ug/L)
* Antibiotics 
* Addition of vasopressin indicated in vasoactive-refractory shock
* Removal of infected/necrotic tissue (where applicable) 
Also of note
 
* The placement of an arterial line is important in the management of vasoactive-refractory shock for close monitoring of blood pressure and tissue oxygenation status via regular blood gasses with key attention to lactate levels and pO2.
'''Shock management'''<ref name=":1" /> 
* Patients with sepsis have high metabolism and thus prolonged starvation should be avoided. Early [[nutrition]] can help protect gut mucosa and prevent translocation of organisms from the GI tract into the systemic circulation<ref name=":3" />.
* Aim for restoration to the following values (if possible within 6 hours): 
** CVP8-12mmHg 
** MAP65-90 
** Sats > 70%
* Management strategies: 
** Fluids<ref name=":0" />
*** Needs to be carefully administrated to avoid complications such as pulmonary oedema as a result of overload, as this will negatively affect oxygen delivery due to circulating volume problems. 
*** For optimal cardiac output:  PAWP = 18cmH2O and CVP = 10-12cmHO
*** Repeat until cardiac output increase with > 10% with central venous pressure increase of < 3 mmHg
** Vasopressors (if hypotension still present after management with fluids)
*** Dopamine or norepinephrine 
*** Aim to restore MAP to 60-90 
** Inotropes 
** Blood transfusions 
** Mechanical ventilation 
 
'''Organ dysfunction management'''<ref name=":1" /
* In cases of renal failure:  Renal replacement treatment 
* In ARDS/acute lung injury:  Mechanical ventilation with tidal volumes of 6-7ml/kg ideal body weight 
 
'''Enhancing or replacing host responses'''<ref name=":1" /> 
* Endocrine response: 
** Low-dose corticosteroids 
** Low-dose vasopresssin (if corticosteroids are not able to be administrated or not working)
* Haemostasis response: Drotrecogin alfa 
 
'''Control of oxygen consumption'''<ref name=":0" />
* Respiratory support:
** Oxygen in cases of ARDS or acute lung injury
** Mechanical ventilation with tidal volume aims of 6-7ml/kg ideal body weight
* Sedation
* Paralysis
* Avoidance of pyrexia and stressors
* Supportive:
** Blood transfusion (packed red blood cells) - also aids in optimisation of haemodynamic status
** Haemofiltration
 
'''Correction of metabolic acidosis (lactate-induced)'''<ref name=":0" />
* Haemofiltration if pH < 7.2
* Changes to IPPV to improve PaCO2
 
'''Other'''<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" />
* Nutritional support is an important factor in the management of septic shock, as it can increase energy consumption up to 50%. It however negatively affects the utilization of nutrition, resulting in catabolism and subsequent muscle wasting.
** Consider enteral supplementation
* Steroids (gram-negative septicaemia)
* Activated protein C
* Maintain HGT:  4-6 mmol/L
* Prevent hospital-acquired infections
* Administration of vaccines (where applicable)
* IVIG's
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Physiotherapy interventions in the ICU setting normally consists of respiratory physiotherapy focusing on airway clearance techniques and early mobilization. During acute sepsis or septic shock, patients are often too unstable for physiotherapy intervention, which only starts when the patient is haemodynamically stable.  
Physiotherapy interventions in the ICU setting normally consists of respiratory physiotherapy focusing on airway clearance techniques and early mobilization. During acute sepsis or septic shock, patients are often too unstable for physiotherapy intervention, which only starts when the patient is haemodynamically stable.  


Positioning plays a big role in the management of patients with sepsis. A heads-up position of 30-45 degrees is recommended to decrease the risk of aspiration pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia, where prone positioning is recommended in sepsis induced ARDS with a PF ratio of less than 150.<ref name=":2" />
Positioning plays a big role in the management of patients with sepsis. A heads-up position of 30-45 degrees is recommended to decrease the risk of aspiration pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia, where prone positioning is recommended in sepsis induced ARDS with a PF ratio of less than 150.<ref name=":2">Rhodes A, Evans LE, Alhazzani W, Levy MM, Antonelli M, Ferrer R, Kumar A, Sevransky JE, Sprung CL, Nunnally ME, Rochwerg B. [https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007%252Fs00134-017-4683-6.pdf Surviving sepsis campaign: international guidelines for management of sepsis and septic shock: 2016.] Intensive care medicine 2017;43(3):304-77.</ref>


A common result of these are [[Critical Illness Polyneuropathy (CIP)|critical illness neuropathy]], and extensive rehabilitation should then be incorporated in the ICU, after discharge to the ward, as well as in the out-patient setting with the aim of getting the patient back to his baseline level of function and participation as per the [[International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF)|ICF]] model.
A common result of these are [[Critical Illness Polyneuropathy (CIP)|critical illness neuropathy]], and extensive rehabilitation should then be incorporated in the ICU, after discharge to the ward, as well as in the out-patient setting with the aim of getting the patient back to his baseline level of function and participation as per the [[International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF)|ICF]] model.

Revision as of 07:58, 22 September 2020

Description[edit | edit source]

Sepsis mortality.png

Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) is an exaggerated defense response of the body to a noxious stressor ( eg.infection, trauma, surgery, acute inflammation, ischemia or reperfusion, malignancy) to localize and then eliminate the endogenous or exogenous source of the insult.

  • It involves the release of acute-phase reactants which are direct mediators of widespread autonomic, endocrine, hematological and immunological alteration in the subject.
  • Even though the purpose is defensive, the dysregulated cytokine storm has the potential to cause massive inflammatory cascade leading to reversible or irreversible end-organ dysfunction and even death.

The graph R shows the mortality assosiacted with sepsis

  1. SIRS with a suspected source of infection is termed sepsis.
  2. Sepsis with one or more end-organ failure is called severe sepsis
  3. Sepsis with hemodynamic instability in spite of intravascular volume repletion is called septic shock. This can potentially lead to multiorgan failure where the body is unable to maintain haemostasis without medical intervention, a common cause of death in the ICU setting.[1]

Together they represent a physiologic continuum with progressively worsening balance between pro and anti-inflammatory responses of the body[2].

Epidemiology[edit | edit source]

Sepsis treatment.jpg

The incidence of sepsis is set at 50-95 per 100 000 with an suspected increase of 9% per year. This is further made up by:[3]

  • 2% of hospital admissions
  • 9% of sepsis results in severe sepsis
  • 3% septic shock
  • 10% of ICU admissions per year
  • Peak age around 60's

Etiology[edit | edit source]

The 2009 European Prevalence of Infection in Intensive Care (EPIC II study) determined that gram-negative bacterial infections far exceed other etiologies as the most common cause of sepsis syndromes with a frequency of 62%, followed by gram-positive infections at 47%.

  • An increase in the prevalence of the latter may be attributable to the performance of more invasive procedures and increased incidence of nosocomial infections.
  • Predominant micro-organisms isolated in patients include Staphylococcus aureus (20%), Pseudomonas (20%), and Escherichia coli (16%). Predominant sites of infection include respiratory (42%), bloodstream (21%), and genitourinary (10%).
  • The influence of bacterial strain and site of infection on mortality was illustrated in a large meta-analysis. In this study, gram-negative infections were overall associated with higher mortality.

Sepsis syndromes caused by multidrug-resistant bacterial strains (methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus (MRSA), vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE)) are on the rise with a current incidence of up to 25%; viruses and parasites cause far fewer cases and are identified in 2% to 4% of cases[4]

Risk factors:

  • Diabetes
  • Malignancy
  • Chronic kidney and liver disease
  • Use of corticosteroids
  • Immunosuppressed state
  • Burns
  • Major surgery
  • Trauma
  • Presence of indwelling catheters
  • Prolonged hospitalization
  • Hemodialysis
  • Extremes of age[4]

80% of sepsis cases is the result of the following infections:[3]

  • Chest (e.g. pneumonia)
  • Abdomen
  • Genitourinary system
  • Primary bloodstream

Mechanism of Injury / Pathological Process[edit | edit source]

Pathogens have the ability to trigger intercellular events in a variety of cells, including the neuroendocrine system, immune cells, epithelium and endothelium. Proinflammatory mediators attempt to eradicate the pathogens, a process that is controlled by anti-inflammatory mediators. This inflammatory process leads to tissue damage, changes in the leukocytes resulting in immune changes. When this natural control process fails, it leads to systemic inflammation and the infection is converted to sepsis or septic shock.[3]

The hypothalamic thermostat is reset by the fever caused by sepsis. In an attempt to cool down, it results in peripheral vasodilatoation and subsequent depletion of the visceral perfusion. Excess nitric oxide production is stimulated by endotoxins and this leads to uncontrolled vasodilatation and a “functional haemorrhage”. Increased cardiac output is thus unsuccessful at maintaining an adequate blood pressure. This can lead to hypoxic tissue damage.[3]

Shock in general normally runs the following course:[3]

Insufficient tissue perfusion → anaerobic metabolism → lactic acidosis → metabolic acidosis → cellular damage → organ failure.

Clinical Presentation[edit | edit source]

Criteria[1]

Two or more of the following:

  • High grade (> 38˚C) or low grade (< 36˚C ) fevers
  • Heart rate > 90/minute
  • RR > 20/minute OR PaCO2 < 4.3kPa
  • WCC > 12

Signs and symptoms[3]

  • Pyrexia
  • Flushed presentation
  • Tachypnea
  • Hypotension
  • Bounding pulse
  • Restricted regional blood flow as the result of vasopressors
  • Signs of tissue hypoperfusion:
    • Areas of mottled skin
    • Oliguria
    • Mental confusion
    • Delayed capillary refill
    • Hyperlactacidaemia

Diagnostic Procedures[edit | edit source]

Septic shock can only be diagnosed when it fits to the clinical criteria and a infection (and the pathogen if possible) is verified.[3]

  • Identification of infection:
    • Look for obvious signs - e.g. community-aquired pneumonia, prupura fulminans, cellulitis, wound discharge.
    • Blood tests / tissue biopsy or sample to determine pathogen
  • Bloods:
    • PCR
    • Microarray based rapid
  • Assess for issue hypoperfusion
    • Glasgow coma scale to determine mental confusion (unable to do in sedated patients)
    • Input and output measures to determine oliguria
  • Multi-organ failure

Outcome Measures[edit | edit source]

  • SOFA (sepsis-related organ failure assessment) score
  • qSOFA (quick sepsis-related organ failure assessment)

Medical Management[edit | edit source]

Below guidelines are derived from the Surviving Sepsis Campaign Guidelines

  1. Source Control
  • Broad-spectrum antibiotics within one hour of diagnosis for all patients. Initial empiric anti-infective therapy should have activity against all likely pathogens and adequate penetration of source tissue.
  • Removal of infected/necrotic tissue, if it is the source of septic shock, i.e. patients with cellulitis, abscess, infected devices, purulent wounds.

2. Management of Shock

  • Measures most effective if achieved within the first six hours of diagnosis
  • Restore central venous pressure (CVP) to 8 mmHg to 12 mmHg
  • Restore mean arterial pressure (MAP) greater than 65 mmHg
  • Restore superior vena cava saturation to 70% or mixed venous saturation to 65%
  • Fluid resuscitation with crystalloid (NS or albumin) and colloid (blood products) up to 80 ml/kg
  • Mechanical ventilation to reduce metabolic demand
  • First-line vasoactive agents (epinephrine in cold shock versus norepinephrine in warm shock) when fluid-refractory Note: dopamine as a first-line agent has fallen out of favor.

3. Enhancing Host Response

  • Corticosteroids indicated in vasoactive-refractory shock and or in patients with low (unstimulated) basal cortisol levels less than 150 ug/L)
  • Addition of vasopressin indicated in vasoactive-refractory shock

Also of note

  • The placement of an arterial line is important in the management of vasoactive-refractory shock for close monitoring of blood pressure and tissue oxygenation status via regular blood gasses with key attention to lactate levels and pO2.
  • Patients with sepsis have high metabolism and thus prolonged starvation should be avoided. Early nutrition can help protect gut mucosa and prevent translocation of organisms from the GI tract into the systemic circulation[4].

Physiotherapy management[edit | edit source]

See the page for the role of physiotherapy in the ICU.

Physiotherapy interventions in the ICU setting normally consists of respiratory physiotherapy focusing on airway clearance techniques and early mobilization. During acute sepsis or septic shock, patients are often too unstable for physiotherapy intervention, which only starts when the patient is haemodynamically stable.

Positioning plays a big role in the management of patients with sepsis. A heads-up position of 30-45 degrees is recommended to decrease the risk of aspiration pneumonia and ventilator-associated pneumonia, where prone positioning is recommended in sepsis induced ARDS with a PF ratio of less than 150.[5]

A common result of these are critical illness neuropathy, and extensive rehabilitation should then be incorporated in the ICU, after discharge to the ward, as well as in the out-patient setting with the aim of getting the patient back to his baseline level of function and participation as per the ICF model.

Resources[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Hough A. Physiotherapy in respiratory care: a problem-solving approach to respiratory and cardiac management. Springer; 2013.
  2. Chakraborty RK, Burns B. Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome. InStatPearls [Internet] 2019 Sep 21. StatPearls Publishing.Available from:https://www.statpearls.com/kb/viewarticle/29832 (last accessed 22.9.2020)
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Annane D, Bellissant E, Cavaillon JM. Septic shock. The Lancet 2005;365(9453):63-78.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Mahapatra S, Heffner AC. Septic Shock (Sepsis). InStatPearls [Internet] 2019 Jun 4. StatPearls Publishing.Available from:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK430939/ (last accessed 22.9.2020)
  5. Rhodes A, Evans LE, Alhazzani W, Levy MM, Antonelli M, Ferrer R, Kumar A, Sevransky JE, Sprung CL, Nunnally ME, Rochwerg B. Surviving sepsis campaign: international guidelines for management of sepsis and septic shock: 2016. Intensive care medicine 2017;43(3):304-77.