3.1.2 Introduction to Sepsis Flashcards

1
Q
A
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2
Q

How does sepsis incidence vary with age?

A

Incidence triples b/t the ages of 65 and 85

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3
Q

If those don’t stabilize the patient, what should be completed within 6 hours? (3)

A
  1. Vasopressors (for hypotension that does not respond to initial fluid resuscitation) to maintain a MAP > 65 mm Hg
  2. In event of persistent arterial hypotension despite volume resuscitation (septic shock) or initial lactate > 4mmol/L
    1. Measure CVP
    2. Measure central venous oxygen saturation (Scv02)
  3. Re-measure lactate if initial lactate was elevated

Targets are: CVP 8 mm Hg, Scv02 > 70%, lactate normal

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4
Q

You suspect sepsis?

A

D. IV levofloxacin, 2 L bolus of LR, transfer to hospital for ICU admission

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5
Q
A

D. Suspected infection, SIRS, and organ dysfunction

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6
Q

What is the fatality rate of severe sepsis?

A

30-50%

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7
Q

Along with having a high mortality, sepsis survivors tend to have what long-term complications?

A

Cognitive impairment

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8
Q

What is the major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide?

A

Severe sepsis

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9
Q

What are the SIRS criteria?

A

Most have 2 or more of the following:

Temp: > 38 C or < 36 C

HR: > 90 beat/min

Respirations: > 20/min

WBC: > 12,000 or < 4,000 or > 10% bands

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10
Q

What differentiates severe sepsis from sepsis?

A

Organ dysfunction

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11
Q

What are some organs that can be dysfunctional in sepsis? What are some clinical manifestions of this organ dysfunction?

A
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12
Q

What are some of the time sensitive interventions?

A

Acute MI, Stoke, Sepsis, Trauma

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13
Q

During examination, you determine that a patient has infection. What are the next two questions that you should ask yourself?

A

Does this patient have SIRS?

Do they have organ dysfunction?

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14
Q

What is sepsis?

A

SIRS plus known or suspected infection

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15
Q

How does the addition of one dysfunctional organ affect the mortality rate?

A

15%-20% for each dysfunctional organ

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16
Q

In the early resuscitation of the severe sepsis patient, the MOST important feature is:

A

B. Antibiotics as fast as they can get in

17
Q

What 4 things should be done within 3 hours of sepsis onset?

A
  1. Measure serum lactate levels
  2. Obtain blood cultures prior to administration of antibiotics (1C)
  3. Administer broad spectrum antibiotics (1B, 1C)
  4. Administer 30 mL/kg crystalloid for hypotension or lactate > 4 mmol/L