| Literature DB >> 25430804 |
Jan De Waele1, Liesbet De Bus.
Abstract
The management of infections in surgical intensive care unit patients poses specific challenges. Although the overall approach to the patient is no different from other patients, diagnosis is often problematic. As in other infections, multidrug resistance is increasingly described, and changes in pharmacokinetics may require different dosing strategies. Also the need for source control adds a level of complexity to the management of the patient. Whereas source control was a purely surgical issue before, percutaneous drainage has emerged as an important alternative. Appropriate timing of source control often remains difficult to determine, but in most severe infections source control should not be delayed. But also the need for a multidisciplinary approach can make the decision making difficult. New concepts such as dedicated source control teams may further assist in selecting the most appropriate treatment strategy and further improve outcome of surgical severe sepsis patients.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25430804 PMCID: PMC4289346 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2334-14-193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Infect Dis ISSN: 1471-2334 Impact factor: 3.090
Urgency of source control intervention (after [23])
| Level of urgency | Timing of intervention | Context |
|---|---|---|
|
| <1-2 h after diagnosis | Rapidly progressive disease e.g. necrotizing fasciitis, intra-abdominal infection with abdominal compartment syndrome |
|
| As soon as patient physiology allows | Limited deferral is acceptable provided antibiotics are administered and patient is not deteriorating e.g. peritonitis |
|
| As soon as infectious process has demarcated | Adequate source control is facilitated and probability of collateral damage lower e.g. infected pancreatic necrosis in a stable patient |
Source control categorization
| Source control-status | Description |
|---|---|
| S0 | No residual infection |
| S1 | Residual macroscopic infection, no ongoing contamination |
| S2 | Residual macroscopic infection and ongoing contamination |