Toxic shock syndrome Flashcards
Define toxic shock syndrome.
An exotoxin-mediated illness caused by bacterial infection.
Which bacteria commonly trigger TSS? What is the most common route of infection for each?
Streptococcus pyogenes -
- Produces superantigens (SPEA and SPEB) and virulence factors (e.g. M1 and M3)
- Commonly associated with infected cutaneous site
Staphylococcus aureus - MSSA/MRSA
- Produces TSS toxin-1 or enterotoxins (B, C, D, E, H)
- Associated with extended tampon use, postpartum infections, and other sites of infection with the organism.
What 2 groups is staphylococcal TSS often split into?
Menstrual TSS - occurs in women during menstruation with extended use of a single tampon or, historically, with highly absorbable tampons.
Non-menstrual TSS - can result from a variety of staphylococcal post-partum vaginal and caesarean wound infection
What are the risk factors for TSS?
- DM
- Alcoholism
- Minor trauma
- Surgery e.g. vaginal delivery, breast, C section, hysterectomy, liposuction
- Single tampont used continuously for consecutive days during menses
- Highly absorbent tampon use
How common is TSS?
~20,000 cases in US each year, less than 1 in 1 million annual incidence in UK
85% sporadic, 10% hospital acquired
What are the clinical features of TSS?
- Severe diffuse or localised pain in an extremity
- Fever
- Localised swelling or erythema
- Hypotension +/- sepsis
- Diffuse, scarlatina-like erythematous rash
What is the management of TSS?
Supportive care in an ICU - removal of source e.g. tampon
Early empirical antibiotic treatment (e.g. clindamycin 900mg IV 8-hourly AND meropenem 1g IV 8-hourly) and further culture-sensitive antibiotic treatment.
Surgical debridement - may be needed for deep-seated streptococcal infections; sequential debridements of infected tissue are often needed,
Confirmed streptococcal TSS:
- Clindamycin + benpen/vancomycin
- IVIG
Confirmed staphylococcal TSS:
- Clindamycin + vanc/linezolid
- Topical mupirocin 2% - to eradicate NASAL culture
How do you diagnose TSS?
MC&S of blood or any suspected site - postive for GAS or S. aureus.
What are the complications of TSS and what is the prognosis?
- Bacteraemia
- ARDS
- DIC
- Renal failure
- Wound sequelae
- Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome - acute haemorrhagic adrenal insufficiency
- Neuropsychiatric sequelae
Prognosis: streptococcal TSS has mortality as high as 30-85% even with early treatment, staphylococcal TSS mortality ~5%. Shock is the most important predictor of death.