Sepsis/Shock Flashcards
Recite the shock CPG
Recite the normal saline dose table for shock
***In the sepsis guideline, they get half the dose
E.g. elderly etc = 500mls, All other patients 1000mls
What is shock?
Shock is a state of cellular and tissue hypoxia due to either reduced oxygen delivery, increased oxygen consumption, inadequate oxygen utilisation, or a combination of these processes
The strongest indication of shock is usually profound hypotension, but this pay be transiently offset by a compensatory tachycardia
Besides hypotension, what are other signs and symptoms of shock?
- altered conscious state
- tachypnoea
- diaphoresis, pallor, cold
- hot, flushed (due to vasodilation)
- increased thirst
Can you ambulate a patient in shock?
- NO! Do not stand or walk the patient
- extricate supine or sitting (as appropriate)
What IV access do you need for your shock patient?
- 18g IVC or larger
- or larger in CF
Sepsis should be suspected when…
- there is a known or suspected source of infection (+/- risk factors for sepsis or SIRS criteria) and SBP <100mmHg
When should you give a reduced max fluid dose?
- Elderly
- hx chronic renal failure
- hx cardiac failure
What do all other patients receive for IVT under the sepsis guideline?
1000ml
What do you do if transport time is >30 mins to hospital
Consult receiving hospital for Ceftriaxone 2g IV
What are signs and symptoms of sepsis?
- General
- fevers, chills, riggers, malaise
- Neurological
- altered mental status or acute deterioration in ADL’s, headache, meningism
- Respiratory
- cough, dyspnoea
- Abdominal
- pain, rigidity, tenderness guarding, swelling
- Genitourinary
- dysuria, urinary frequency or urgency, haematuria
- Skin
- cellulitis (erythema, oedema, warmth, pain)
- petechial rash
- septic arthritis (joint pain, swelling, warmth)
- Infected wound or abscess (erythema, swelling, pain, prurient discharge)
What are some risk factors for sepsis?
- neutropenia, recent chemotherapy or other immunocompromise
- recent pneumonia, COPD
- recent trauma/surgery/procedure or hospital stay in the last 6 weeks
- indwelling medical devices (e.g. IDC, SPC, CVC, PEG
What is the SIRS criteria?
- <36 degrees or >38 degrees
- HR >90
- RR >20
Define sepsis.
- Sepsis is defined as ‘life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection’
- = organ dysfunction + infection
pathophysiology of sepsis
- septic shock results when infectious microorganisms in the blood stream induce a profound inflammatory response causing haemodynamic decompensation
- the pathogenesis involves a complex response of cellular activation that triggers the release of a multitude of pro inflammatory mediators
- it can lead to tissue damage, organ failure and death