| Literature DB >> 29990331 |
Lachmi R Kodan1,2,3, Kim J C Verschueren2, Humphrey H H Kanhai4,5, Jos J M van Roosmalen4,6, Kitty W M Bloemenkamp2, Marcus J Rijken2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sepsis was the main cause of maternal mortality in Suriname, a middle-income country. Objective of this study was to perform a qualitative analysis of the clinical and management aspects of sepsis-related maternal deaths with a focus on the 'golden hour' principle of antibiotic therapy.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29990331 PMCID: PMC6039050 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200281
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Overview of the sepsis-related maternal deaths between 2010 and 2014 in Suriname.
Characteristics of the sepsis-related maternal deaths in Suriname 2010–2014.
| < 20 | 7 (24) |
| 20–35 | 18 (62) |
| > 35 | 4 (14) |
| Hindu | 5 (17) |
| Creole | 6 (21) |
| Maroon | 14 (48) |
| Javanese | 3 (10) |
| Indigenous | 0 (0) |
| Mixed | 1 (4) |
| Social insurance | 23 (82) |
| State health | 4 (14) |
| Private | 1 (4) |
| < 3 | 18 (67) |
| ≥ 3 | 9 (33) |
| None | 4 (19) |
| < 4 | 6 (29) |
| ≥ 4 | 11(52) |
| AS | 1 (5) |
| Positive | 6 (26) |
| Negative | 17 (74) |
| No anemia | 8 (35) |
| Severe anemia (Hb <4.3) | 2 (9) |
| Moderate anemia (Hb 4,3–6,1) | 10 (43) |
| Mild anemia (Hb 6.2–6.8) | 3 (13) |
| Spontaneous | 13 (62) |
| Caesarean section | 8 (38) |
| Yes | 3 (13) |
| No | 20 (87) |
| Yes | 13 (48) |
| No | 14 (52) |
| Yes | 18 (62 |
| No | 11 (38) |
| Early pregnancy | 2 (7) |
| Antepartum (n = 6) | |
| < 28 weeks | 2 (7) |
| 28–33+6 weeks | 2 (7) |
| ≥ 34 weeks | 1 (3) |
| GA unknown | 1(3) |
| Postpartum (n = 21) | |
| ≤ 48 hours | 4 (14) |
| 2–7 days | 9 (31) |
| 1–6 weeks | 8 (28) |
*Antenatal care starting from gestation of 16 weeks. (n = 27)
# Perinatal death is death of fetus with a gestation of more than 22 weeks or 500 grams
Case description of direct maternal deaths between 2010 and 2014 in Suriname with sepsis as underlying cause.
| Case | Diagnosis | Culture | Time | Time to death | ICU | Antibiotics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 years | Endometritis after manual placenta removal | Not performed | Postpartum | 3 days | No | Amoxicillin orally |
| 41 years | Caesarean due to pre-eclampsia, complicated by endometritis and | Blood culture: no growth | Postpartum | 7 days | Yes | Initially amoxicillin orally. After 2 days intravenous amoxicillin, gentamycin and metronidazole |
| 22 years | Vacuum extraction and episiotomy complicated by endometritis and a | Blood culture: P. aeruginosa (no suscep-tibility done) | Postpartum | 2 days | No | Initially ciprofloxacine orally profylactic. 5 days later intravenous cefotaxime, metro-nidazole, cotrimoxazole |
| 28 years | Caesarean due to pre-eclampsia, complicated by a wound infection | Blood culture: no growth | Postpartum | 2 days | Yes | Initially amoxicillin orally. After 5 days amoxicillin intravenously + metro-nidazole, gentamycin and ciprofloxacine |
* Time between recognition of sepsis and death
Micro-organisms isolated from the cultures performed in the sepsis-related maternal deaths in Suriname.
| Blood cultures positive | Urine cultures positive | Sputum cultures positive |
|---|---|---|
| Actinobacter | Pseudomonas aeruginosa [n = 2] | |
| Klebsiella pneumoniae | Klebsiella pneumoniae [n = 2] | |
| Escherichia Coli | ||
Fig 2Number of sepsis-related maternal deaths showing different organ system dysfunctions (n = 27).
Substandard care analysis of sepsis-related maternal deaths in Suriname between 2010 and 2014.
| Sepsis-related deaths | |
|---|---|
| 4 (15) | |
| 24 (89) | |
| Insufficient quality of care | 21 (77) |
| Inadequate monitoring | 16 (59) |
| Poor Communication | 10 (37) |
| Delay in diagnosis | 17 (63) |
| Staff | 2 (7) |
| Medication | 4 (15) |
| Poor adherence to medication | 7 (26) |
| Definitely / most probably | 10 (37) |
| Possibly | 13 (48) |
| Unable to determine | 2 (7) |
* 27 sepsis-related deaths could be analysed in-depth due to 2 missing files
Fig 3Clinical signs when sepsis was diagnosed in the sepsis-related maternal deaths in Suriname between 2010 and 2014 (n = 27).
Fig 4Overview of the time between admission, first signs of sepsis, first vital signs after admission, the initiation of antibiotic treatment and death per patient with sepsis as the underlying cause of death (n = 17).
Legend: initial signs of sepsis designated with a gray triangle, use of antibiotics designated with grey rhombus, death designated with a black cross, vital signs recorded after initial signs of sepsis designated with a grey circle.