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Stop Sepsis Save Lives: With Early
Stop Sepsis Save Lives: With Early
Save Lives
with Early
Appropriate and Adequate
Antibiotics
Sepsis : Introduction
➢ Definition : 1991
➢ Definition 1992
➢SIRS criteria
Khilnani G.C. and Hadda V. Indian J Chest Dis Allied Sci 2009;51:27-36
5
6
Sepsis : a Complex Disease
Bacterimia
Other
Trauma
Fungemia
Infection SEPSIS SIRS Burns
Parasitimia
Pancreatitis
Viremia
Other
8
9
Sepsis : High Prevalence in UK
1 000 000
300 000
800 000
400 000
100 000
200 000
Year
Mortality
40-70%2
Mortality
25-30%2
Mortality
9,3%1
631
504
450 525
70%
Patients
Patients
354 49%
300 350
309
150 175
0 0
Sepsis Dead Sepsis Dead
A. Initial Resuscitation
C. Diagnosis
D. Antimicrobial Therapy
E. Source Control
F. Infection Prevention
19
2a. Initial empiric anti-infective therapy of one or more drugs that have
activity against all likely pathogens (bacterial and/or fungal or viral) and that penetrate in
adequate concentrations into tissues presumed to be the source of sepsis (grade 1B).
3. Use of low procalcitonin levels or similar biomarkers to assist the clinician in the
discontinuation of empiric antibiotics in patients who initially appeared septic, but have
no subsequent evidence of infection (grade 2C).
4b. Empiric combination therapy should not be administered for more than 3–5 days.
De-escalation to the most appropriate single therapy should be performed as soon as the
susceptibility profile is known (grade 2B).
5. Duration of therapy typically 7–10 days; longer courses may be appropriate in patients
who have a slow clinical response, undrainable foci of infection, bacteremia with S. aureus; some
fungal and viral infections or immunologic deficiencies, including neutropenia (grade 2C).
6. Antiviral therapy initiated as early as possible in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock
of viral origin (grade 2C).
7. Antimicrobial agents should not be used in patients with severe inflammatory states determined
to be of non infectious cause (UG).
0.8 delay in
administering
0.6 antibiotics in
septic shock,
0.4 mortality
increases by
0.2
7.6%
0.0
Rhomberg PR. Jones RN. Diagnostic Microbiology and Infectious Disease 2009; 65 : 414–426
Antimicrobial Treatment of Sepsis
100
100 100
75
Response Rate (%)
Clinical
50 Bacteriologic
50
40
25