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Initial resuscitation in sepsis

Initial resuscitation in sepsis

Initial resuscitation in sepsis

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Sepsis Recognition - Spotting the Enemy

qSOFA criteria for sepsis recognition and its utility

  • Sepsis: Life-threatening organ dysfunction from a dysregulated host response to infection.
  • Screening Tool (Bedside): quick SOFA (qSOFA) score identifies high-risk patients outside the ICU. Suspect sepsis if score is $≥ extbf{2}$.
    • Hypotension: Systolic BP ≤ 100 mmHg
    • Altered Mental Status: Glasgow Coma Scale < 15
    • Tachypnea: Respiratory Rate ≥ 22/min
    • 📌 Mnemonic: HAT

⭐ Lactate > 2 mmol/L indicates tissue hypoperfusion and is a critical marker, even if blood pressure is normal. It prompts immediate resuscitation.

  • Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS): Broader criteria, less specific for sepsis. Requires ≥2 of:
    • Temp > 38°C or < 36°C
    • HR > 90
    • RR > 20 or PaCO₂ < 32
    • WBC > 12,000 or < 4,000

Hour-1 Bundle - Race Against Time

Immediate, coordinated actions within the first hour of recognizing sepsis or septic shock. The goal is to stabilize the patient and prevent progression to multi-organ failure.

  • Measure Lactate: Re-measure if initial lactate is elevated (> 2 mmol/L).
  • Obtain Blood Cultures: Crucial before starting antibiotics, but must not delay therapy.
  • Administer Broad-Spectrum Antibiotics: Administer within 1 hour of recognition.
  • Rapid Fluid Resuscitation: Begin 30 mL/kg IV crystalloid for hypotension or lactate ≥ 4 mmol/L.
  • Apply Vasopressors: If hypotensive during or after fluid challenge, to maintain Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) ≥ 65 mmHg. Norepinephrine is the first-line agent.

⭐ For septic shock patients, every hour of delay in administering effective antibiotics is associated with a measurable increase in mortality.

Refractory Shock - When Fluids Fail

Persistent hypotension despite adequate fluid resuscitation (30 mL/kg crystalloid) necessitates vasopressors to maintain Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) ≥ 65 mmHg.

  • Norepinephrine: First-line. Potent α1 & moderate β1 agonist.
  • Vasopressin: Add-on therapy, not titrated. Acts on V1 receptors, often sparing catecholamine requirements.
  • Epinephrine: For refractory shock despite initial pressors. Potent α & β effects.
  • Dobutamine: Consider for myocardial dysfunction (↑CI, ScvO2) once MAP is stable.

⭐ For patients on high-dose catecholamines, consider IV hydrocortisone (200 mg/day). This is thought to reverse acquired adrenal insufficiency in severe stress states.

Vasopressor titration algorithm for septic shock

Monitoring & Goals - Are We Winning?

  • CVP: 8-12 mmHg
  • MAP: ≥ 65 mmHg
  • Urine Output: > 0.5 $mL/kg/hr$
  • ScvO₂ (Central Venous O₂ Sat): ≥ 70%
  • Lactate Clearance: Trend towards normalization, indicating improved tissue perfusion.

⭐ Lactate clearance is a key marker of resuscitation success, reflecting improved tissue perfusion, and should be monitored alongside hemodynamic parameters.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Initial resuscitation: rapid 30 mL/kg isotonic crystalloid infusion within the first 3 hours.
  • Persistent hypotension despite fluids requires vasopressors; norepinephrine is first-line.
  • The primary hemodynamic target is a Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) ≥ 65 mmHg.
  • Measure lactate initially and serially to guide resuscitation; a ↓ lactate indicates improved perfusion.
  • Obtain blood cultures before administering broad-spectrum antibiotics, but do not delay antibiotics beyond 1 hour.
  • Crucially, identify and address the source of infection early.

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