Articles: sepsis.
-
Critical care medicine · Jul 1995
Meta AnalysisSteroid controversy in sepsis and septic shock: a meta-analysis.
The use of corticosteroids in patients with sepsis or septic shock has been controversial for many decades. Clinical studies have reported beneficial, as well as negative results. We conducted a meta-analysis to assess the clinical evidence and to evaluate treatment effects in specific subgroups of patients. ⋯ No overall beneficial effect of corticosteroids in patients with septic shock was observed; however, there is some evidence for a positive effect in patients with Gram-negative septicemia.
-
The incidence of maternal mortality related to sepsis has decreased during the past 2 decades because of the availability of broad spectrum antibiotics and advances in critical care. However, sepsis continues to account for approximately 7.6% of maternal deaths in the United States. ⋯ Nursing and medical management strategies are included. A case study is presented to illustrate the typical clinical course from infection, to bacteremia, sepsis, and septic shock.
-
Comparative Study
Reduced tumor necrosis factor production in endotoxin-spiked whole blood after trauma: experimental results and clinical correlation.
The overproduction of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF) plays a key role in virtually every experimental model of septic shock, which has led to the development of several therapies that target TNF and other cytokines in clinical sepsis. However, our previous work showed that plasma TNF was reduced, rather than increased, when a septic challenge was administered 3 days after hemorrhagic shock. In this study we compared whole-blood TNF production ex vivo in human beings and animals after trauma. ⋯ There was no evidence of TNF overproduction in whole blood after trauma. If these results could be generalized to other tissues, it would be difficult to justify therapeutic targeting of TNF in exaggerated inflammatory response (or septic complications) after trauma.
-
Pediatr. Infect. Dis. J. · Jul 1995
Application of new sepsis definitions to evaluate outcome of pediatric patients with severe systemic infections.
No published reports have stratified pediatric patients with systemic infections according to the new sepsis terminology guidelines. In addition little is known about the outcome of sepsis in developing countries. This large 12-year retrospective study evaluated the outcome of 815 infants and children with sepsis managed in a Latin American pediatric intensive care unit. ⋯ Case-fatality rates were higher in patients with septic shock, multiorgan dysfunction, sepsis caused by Pseudomonas aeruginosa and meningococcemia than in those without these conditions. Although no difference in mortality was detected between culture-proved and culture-negative sepsis, more patients receiving an inappropriate antimicrobial agent died than those treated with an appropriate drug (53% vs. 34%, P = 0.012). We believe that with the use of the new terminology system a more reliable comparison of data from pediatric sepsis studies and of emerging immunomodulating therapeutic modalities can be achieved.
-
Nosocomial bloodstream infections occur at a rate of 1.3 to 14.5 per 1000 hospital admissions and are believed to lead directly to 62,500 deaths per year in the United States. Measures of the incidence and the proportion of all hospital deaths related to deaths from these infections provide estimates of their impact. The objectives of the study were to characterize the secular trends in nosocomial bloodstream infection at a single institution and to estimate the population-attributable risk for death among patients experiencing the infection. ⋯ The incidence, the etiologic fraction, and the population-attributable risk for death among patients experiencing nosocomial bloodstream infections increased progressively during the last decade.