| Literature DB >> 34089401 |
Marco Di Serafino1, Daniela Viscardi2, Francesca Iacobellis3, Luigi Giugliano4, Luigi Barbuto3, Gaspare Oliva3, Roberto Ronza3, Antonio Borzelli5, Antonio Raucci3, Filomena Pezzullo3, Maria Giovanna De Cristofaro2, Luigia Romano3.
Abstract
Septic shock is a medical emergency that represents one of the most important underlying causes for presentation to the Emergency Department. Sepsis is defined as organ dysfunction, life-threatening event caused by a deregulated inflammatory host response to infection, with a mortality risk ranging from 10 to 40%. Early sepsis identification is the cornerstone of management and diagnostic imaging can play a pivotal role in this clinical context. The choice of imaging modality depends on several factors, associated with the clinical condition and the presence or absence of localising signs and symptoms. The diagnostic accuracy of contrast-enhanced total-body CT has been well established during septic shock, allowing for a rapid, panoramic, and detailed study of multiple body areas, simultaneously. The aim of this article is to illustrate the controversial CT hypoperfusion complex in patients with septic shock, characterised by the following imaging features: decreased enhancement of the viscera; increased mucosal enhancement; luminal dilation of the small bowel; mural thickening and fluid-filled loops of the small bowel; the halo sign and flattening of the inferior vena cava; reduced aortic diameter; peripancreatic oedema; abnormal parenchymal perfusion; and other controversial findings that are variably associated with each other and reversible during the early stages. Increasing physicians' awareness of the significance of these findings could prompt alternative approaches to the early assessment and management of septic shock. In this perspective, CT imaging represents a useful tool for a complete, rapid and detailed diagnosis of clinically suspected septic shock, which can be used to improve patient outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: CT hypoperfusion complex; Contrast-enhanced CT; Diagnostic imaging; Sepsis; Septic shock
Year: 2021 PMID: 34089401 DOI: 10.1186/s13244-021-01006-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insights Imaging ISSN: 1869-4101