The sepsis syndrome: Differential diagnosis of the flu-like illness 
By:Divya Ahuja, M.D.
Med Micro 2008 Clinical Correlations #5
Traditional definitions 
    * Bacteremia (or fungemia): presence of microorganisms in the blood
    * Sepsis: Harmful consequences of microbes or their toxins in blood or tissues
    * Septicemia (or bloodstream infection): bacteremia with clinical manifestations
    * Septic shock: shock due to sepsis, often with bloodstream infection
Revised definitions 
    * Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS)
    * Sepsis
    * Severe sepsis
    * Septic shock
Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS) 
    * Two or more of the following
          o temperature > 38 degrees C (100.4 F)
          o respirations > 20/minute
          o Heart rate > 90 beats per minute
          o leukocyte count > 12,000/cmm or < 4000/cmm or with > 10% band forms
Sepsis and Severe Sepsis 
    * Sepsis: SIRS plus a documented infection (culture proven or identified by visual inspection)
    * Severe sepsis: Sepsis associated with organ dysfunction, abnormalities due to hypoperfusion (such as lactic acidosis, oliguria, or acute alteration in mental status), ARDS, DIC, low platelets
Septic shock 
    * Definition: Sepsis-induced hypotension despite fluid resuscitation and/or inotropic support, plus hypoperfusion abnormalities
    * The hallmark of septic shock is low systemic vascular resistance, which distinguishes it from hemorrhagic shock and cardiogenic shock.
Multiple Organ Failure 
    * Some physiologic descriptors
          o Serum creatinine
          o Platelet count
          o pO2/FiO2 ratio
          o Serum bilirubin
          o Glasgow coma score
Sepsis 
    * Sepsis has a 20-50% mortality
    * Severity has increased recently
    * Hospital case-fatality has declined
    * Incidence is greatest in winter
    * Risk factors for sepsis
          o Bacteremia
          o Advanced age
          o Impaired immune system
          o Community acquired pneumonia
Continuum of severity 
    * Incidence of positive blood cultures increases along the continuum
    * Increased mortality rate
    * Severe organ dysfunction manifested as
          o Acute respiratory distress syndrome
          o Acute renal failure
          o Disseminated intravascular coagulation
Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy
Case #1 
    * 20-year-old college student in ER
    * General malaise, low-grade fever, and rapid development of purplish discoloration on his face. (from when he left his house to the time he arrived at the emergency room).
    * Blood cultures were drawn and he was admitted to the intensive care unit
Presentation 
    * Febrile, tachycardic, systolic BP-70
    * Creatinine- 3.6, poor urine output
    * Platelets-46000
    * INR- 2.6
    * Obtunded mental status
    * Needing maximum ventilatory support
    * Meningococcemia with Waterhouse-Friderichsen Syndrome and DIC
    * Treat with penicillin, ceftriaxone or chloramphenicol.
    * Family members and hospital employees in contact with respiratory secretions should receive prophylaxis. Attack rates for household contacts is 0.3-1%, 300-1000 times the rate in the general population (rifampin x 4 doses or cipro x 1 dose)
Epidemiology of meningococcal disease 
Evaluation of blood cultures 
    * True-positive versus false-positive (contamination; pseudobacteremia)
    * Transient versus intermittent versus continuous
    * Polymicrobial versus unimicrobial
    * Primary versus secondary
Clues to contamination 
    * Microorganisms that are usually not pathogenic, unless isolated from multiple cultures (e.g., coagulase-negative staphylococci; Bacillus species)
    * < 2 positive cultures and/or delayed growth and/or < 1 cfu/ml
    * Doesn’t “fit” the clinical picture
Patterns of bacteremia 
    * Transient: caused by manipulation of a flora-containing body surface
    * Intermittent: typical of most infections giving rise to positive blood cultures
    * Sustained (or continuous): characteristic of intravascular infections--endocarditis, endarteritis, suppurative thrombophlebitis, infected AV fistula
Number of microorganisms 
    * Unimicrobial (or “monomicrobial”) bacteremia: one isolate
    * Polymicrobial bacteremia: more than one microorganism; typical of complicated situations often with surgical implications
Epidemiology of sepsis 
    * Contributes to > 100,000 deaths in the United States each year.
    * Annual incidence is probably between 300,000 and 500,000 cases.
    * About 2/3rds of cases occur in patients hospitalized for another illness (nosocomial infection).
Risk factors for nosocomial sepsis 
    * Gram-negative bacilli: diabetes mellitus; tumors; cirrhosis; burns; invasive procedures; neutropenia
    * Gram-positive cocci: vascular access lines, devices
    * Fungi: immunosuppression; broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy
Host factors in sepsis 
    * Mortality is directly related to severity of underlying disease: rapidly-fatal> ultimately fatal (i.e., within 5 years)>nonfatal.
    * Elderly have increased mortality.
    * Mortality is higher in patients with subnormal temperatures than in those with fever.
Clinical findings in sepsis 
    * Early: apprehension, hyperventilation, altered mental status
    * Complications: hypotension, bleeding, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, organ failure
    * Lungs: cyanosis, acidosis, full-blown ARDS  
    * Kidneys: oliguria, anuria, tubular necrosis
    * Liver: jaundice and transaminitis
    * Heart: heart failure, stunned myocardium
    * Gastrointestinal: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stress ulceration
    * Systemic: lactic acidosis
    * Petechiae early in course: suspect especially meningococcemia, RMSF
    * Ecthyma gangrenosum: Ps. aeruginosa
    * Generalized erythroderma: Toxic Shock Syndrome
Petechiae 
Ecthyema gangrenosum
Skin lesions in septicemias (1) 
    * Neisseria meningitidis: erythematous macules or petechiae and purpura
    * Rocky Mountain spotted fever: petechiae, purpura
    * Staphylococcus aureus: “purulent purpura”
    * Pseudomonas aeruginosa: ecthyma gangrenosum
    * Salmonella typhi: “Rose spots”
    * Hemophilus influenzae: cellulitis
    * Endocarditis: petechiae; Osler’s nodes (painful lesions of finger and toe pads); Janeway lesions (painless lesions of palms or soles)
    * Anthrax: papules-->vesicles-->eschar
    * Fungemias
A 50 yo man presents to emergency room with severe pain and swelling of LLE. On exam, temperature is 40.0 ÂșC, pulse rate is 135/min, respiration rate is 35/min, and blood pressure is 80/40
Which of the following is the most appropriate initial therapy? 
    * LLE elevation
    * X-ray of LLE
    * Surgical consultation
    * Oral antibiotics
Necrotizing fasciitis  
    * Necrotizing fasciitis usually results from an initial break in skin (trauma or surgery)
    * It is deep: may involve the fascial and/or muscle compartments
    * The initial presentation is that of cellulitis
Necrotizing fasciitis: Red flags 
    * Severe pain (out of proportion of skin findings)
    * Bullae (due to occlusion of deep blood vessels)
    * Skin necrosis or ecchymosis
    * Gas in soft tissue (palpation or imaging)
    * Systemic toxicity
    * Rapid spread during antibiotic therapy
Necrotizing fasciitis 
    * Monomicrobial: S. pyogenes, S. aureus, anaerobic streptococci,…. Most are community acquired and present in the limbs in patients with DM or vascular insufficiency
    * Polymicrobial: aerobic and anaerobic (bowel flora), Usually associated with abdominal surgical procedures, decubitus ulcer, perianal ulcer, bartholin abscess, IV drug injection
Staphylococcal bacteremia 
    * Complications: endocarditis; metastatic infection; sepsis syndrome
    * Staphylococci adhere avidly to endothelial cells and bind through adhesin-receptor interactions
    * Fulminant onset; high fever, erythematous rash with subsequent desquamation, and multiorgan damage
    * DDx: Rocky Mountain spotted fever, streptococcal scarlet fever, leptospirosis
Streptococcal toxic shock syndrome 
    * Early onset of shock and organ failure associated with isolation of group A streptococci
    * Necrotizing fasciitis present in about 50% of cases
    * Early symptoms: Myalgias, malaise, chills, fever, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
    * Pain at minor trauma site may be first symptom
Sepsis in the asplenic patient 
    * Frequently fulminant with massive bacteremia
    * Streptococcus pneumoniae accounts for 50% to 90% of infections and 60% of deaths
    * Other pathogens: Haemophilus influenzae, Neisseria meningitidis, Capnocytophaga canimorsus (after dog bites),  
      Babesia microti (babesiosis)
64 year old WM 
    * Presents with fever, hypotension, cellulitis with bullous skin lesions
    * PMH: cirrhosis
    * SH: recently returned from New Orleans, likes oysters
Vibrio vulnificus sepsis 
    * Organism found in warm seawater and in shellfish (90% of deaths due to seafood in U.S.)
    * Cirrhosis a major risk factor to sepsis, with rapid onset
    * Chills, fever, characteristic skin lesions (bullae with hemorrhagic fluid; necrotizing fasciitis, other)
    * Also causes wound infection after exposure to salt water
41 year old WM 
    * Fever, “worst headache ever,” myalgias, rash
    * Returned from family camping trip in Smoky Mountain National Park 1 week PTA
Rocky Mountain spotted fever 
    * Generalized infection of vascular endothelium
    * Headache typically severe. Fever may be low-grade and rash may be absent (“spotless fever”) when patient first seen
    * Suspect with flu-like illness and severe headache in endemic areas!
65 year old woman  
    * PMH diabetes
    * During influenza epidemic, presents with fever, chills, aching all over (myalgia)
    * PE: bibasilar rales; no murmur
    * Admitted to hospital for treatment of heart failure
Infective endocarditis: definitions 
    * Septic vegetations of the endocardium usually involving the heart valves or other areas of turbulent flow
    * Acute endocarditis occurs on normal heart valves, is caused by highly virulent bacteria and leads to death in < 6 weeks
    * Subacute endocarditis is caused by less virulent bacteria and has a more indolent course.
Pathogenesis of endocarditis 
    * Sterile vegetations arise downstream of high-flow areas of the heart
    * Damaged endothelium and foreign bodies increase turbulent flow
    * Microorganisms implant on the sterile vegetations during transient bacteremia
    * Septic vegetations become a source of infection elsewhere
Diagnosis of endocarditis 
    * Revised Duke Criteria : positive blood cultures plus echocardiography with or without minor criteria
    * Heart murmurs (especially regurgitant)
    * Splinter hemorrhages (nail beds)
    * Osler nodes (finger pulps; painful)
    * Petechiae; “pustular purpura” (Staph)
    * Roth spots (fundi)
Etiologies of endocarditis 
    * Viridans streptococci most common (30-40%)
    * Other streptococci include enterococci and Streptococcus bovis
    * Staphylococci cause 20-30%)
    * Less common: aerobic gram-negative rods; HACEK organisms; fungi; anaerobic bacteria; Brucella; Coxiella burnetti; Chlamydia psittaci
    * “Culture-negative” (<5% to 24%)
Case  
    * 42 year male
    * Previously healthy, non smoker
    * 2 week history of progressive cough, dyspnea, fever
    * Intubated within 48 hours of admission
Case
Hamman-Rich syndrome  
    * Also known as acute interstitial pneumonia, is a rare, severe lung disease which usually affects otherwise healthy individuals
    * Cough, fever, dyspnea
    * Hamman-Rich syndrome progresses rapidly, with hospitalization and mechanical ventilation within days to weeks after initial symptoms
Sepsis-summary 
    * Look at the host (age, immunedeficiency,-HIV, cancer, steroids, cirrhosis, dialysis,
    * Clinical assessment for MOD (vitals, perfusion, mental status, urine output)
    * Lab parameters-platelets, creatinine, coags, leukocytosis vs. leukopenia
    * Hemodyanamic, ventilatory support, antibiotics
    * Hit hard and hit early and then deescalate based on emerging microbiological data
The sepsis syndrome: Differential diagnosis of the flu-like illness.ppt
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