| Literature DB >> 24553516 |
Ricardo Luiz Cordioli, Eduardo Cordioli, Romulo Negrini, Eliezer Silva.
Abstract
Sepsis is defined as an acute inflammatory response syndrome secondary to an infectious focus. It has a high incidence, morbidity and mortality, causing substantial financial costs, especially due to complications such as septic shock and multiple organ dysfunction. The pathogen toxins associated with individual susceptibility culminate with cytokine release, which promotes a systemic inflammatory response that can progress to multiple organ dysfunction and eventual patient death. Specifically, sepsis incidence, morbidity and mortality are lower in pregnant women, as this group is typically younger with fewer comorbidities having a polymicrobial etiology resulting in sepsis. Pregnant women exhibit physiological characteristics that may confer specific clinical presentation and laboratory patterns during the sepsis course. Thus, a better understanding of these changes is critical for better identification and management of these patients. The presence of a fetus also requires unique approaches in a pregnant woman with sepsis. Sepsis treatment is based on certain guidelines that were established after major clinical trials, which, unfortunately, all classified pregnancy as a exclusion criteria. Thus, the treatment of sepsis in the general population has been extrapolated to the pregnant population, with the following main goals: maintenance of tissue perfusion with fluid replacement and vasoactive drugs (initial resuscitation), adequate oxygenation, control of the infection source and an early start of antibiotic therapy, corticosteroid infusion and blood transfusion when properly indicated, prophylaxis, and specifically monitoring and maintenance of fetal heath.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24553516 PMCID: PMC4031877 DOI: 10.5935/0103-507X.20130056
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Bras Ter Intensiva ISSN: 0103-507X
The diagnostic criteria for sepsis in the presence of confirmed or suspected infection
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| Core temperature >38.3ºC or <36ºC |
| Heart rate >90bpm or >2 SD above the normal value for age | |
| Tachypnea | |
| Altered mental status | |
| Significant edema or positive fluid balance (>20ml/kg over 24 hours) | |
| Hyperglycemia (plasma glucose >110mg/dL or 7.7mmol/L ) | |
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| White blood cell count >12,000/μL or <4,000/μL |
| Normal white blood cell count with >10% immature forms | |
| Plasma C reactive protein >2 SD above the normal value | |
| Plasma procalcitonin >2 SD above the normal value | |
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| Systolic blood pressure <90mmHg, mean arterial pressure <70 or a systolic blood pressure decrease >40mmHg in adults or <2 SD below normal for age |
| ScvO2>70% | |
| Cardiac index >3,5L/min/m2 | |
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| PaO2/FiO2 <300 |
| Urine output <0.5mL/kg/h | |
| Creatinine increase ≥0.5mg/dL | |
| INR >1.5 or APTT >60s | |
| Platelet count <100,000/μL | |
| Ileus (absent bowel sounds) | |
| Plasma total bilirubin >4mg/dL or >70mmol/L | |
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| Lactate >3mmol/L |
| Decreased capillary refill or mottling |
SD - standard deviation; ScvO2 - central venous oxygen saturation; PaO2 - arterial oxygen partial pressure; FiO2 General - fraction of inspired oxygen; INR - international normalized ratio; APTT - activated partial thromboplastin time.
The physiological changes in pregnancy and their impact on diagnosis
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| Cardiovascular | ↓ peripheral vascular resistance | Masking of initial signs of sepsis |
| ↑ heart rate | Increased hypoperfusion | |
| ↓ arterial pressure | ||
| ↑ cardiac output | ||
| Blood | ↑ plasma volume | Greater reduction of oxygen supply to tissues |
| ↑ red cell volume | ||
| Anemia | ||
| Respiratory | ↑ tidal volume | Delayed physiological response to metabolic alkalosis |
| ↓ residual volume | ||
| ↑ minute-ventilation by 30-40% | Impaired oxygenation | |
| ↑ respiratory center simulation → ↑ respiratory rate | ||
| ↓ da PaCO2 | ||
| Renal | Ureteropelvic dilation and ↓ureteral pressure due to smooth muscle relaxation | Delayed identification of renal injury secondary to sepsis |
| Flaccid bladder | Favorable to pyelonephritis | |
| ↑ intravesical pressure due to the pregnant uterus weight | ||
| ↑ vesicoureteral reflux | ||
| ↑ renal plasma flow | ||
| ↑ glomerular filtration rate | ||
| ↓ urea and creatinine average values | ||
| Asymptomatic bacteriuria | ||
| Gastrointestinal | ↓ muscle tone across the digestive tract | ↑ risk of bacterial translocation |
| Delayed gastric emptying | ↑ risk of aspiration pneumonia | |
| Diaphragm elevation by the pregnant womb | ↑ risk of cholestasis, hyperbilirumbinemia and jaundice | |
| Changes in bile composition | ||
| ↑ production of pro-inflammatory cytokines bye Kupffer cells | ||
| Coagulation | ↑ factors VII, VIII, IX, X, XII, Von Willebrand and fibrinogen | ↑ risk of thrombotic events |
| ↓ protein S | ↑ risk of DIC | |
| ↓ fibrinolytic activity | ||
| Genital | ↓ vaginal pH | ↑ risk of chorioamnionitis |
| ↑ glycogen in vaginal epithelium |
PaCO2 - arterial carbon dioxide partial pressure; DIC – disseminated intravascular coagulation.
The microbial causes of septic shock in pregnant women
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The main diagnoses associated with severe infection in obstetric patients
| Infections associated with pregnancy and/or pregnancy-related surgical procedures | Chorioamnionitis |
| Postpartum endometritis | |
| Septic abortion | |
| Septic thrombophlebitis | |
| Puerperal sepsis | |
| Infection of cesarean section wound | |
| Episiotomy infection | |
| Necrotizing fasciitis | |
| Pelvic abscess | |
| Infected cerclage | |
| Amniocentesis - septic abortion | |
| Umbilical cord biopsy | |
| Infections unrelated to pregnancy but occurring more often in the obstetric population | Lower urinary tract infection |
| Pyelonephritis | |
| Malaria | |
| Listeriosis | |
| Viral hepatitis (E) | |
| Varicella pneumonia | |
| Coccidioidomycosis | |
| Aspiration pneumonia | |
| Incidental infections during pregnancy | Community-acquired pneumonia |
| HIV-related infections | |
| Toxoplasmosis | |
| Cytomegalovirus | |
| Gastrointestinal infections | |
| Disseminated herpes | |
| Hospital-acquired infections at any hospital site including the ICU | Pneumonia nosocomial |
| Ventilator-associated pneumonia | |
| Catheter-related urinary tract infection | |
| Central line-associated infection | |
| Skin and soft tissue infection related to peripheral intravenous catheters; infected surgical wound |
HIV - human immunodeficiency virus; ICU – intensive care unit.