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Management of Adult Fever and Sepsis MLP EM Education Curriculum Dave Markel September 15, 2015
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What will be covered Basic concepts and definitions Initial management Septic shock Pearls and pitfalls
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What will not be covered Pediatric fever (Scheduled for May 2017, Dr. Justice) Febrile seizures Hyperthermia Environmental Drug-induced
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Basic concepts and definitions Fever: temp > 37.8 C = 100 F (CDC definition) Not “I’m usually at 96 degrees so 98.6 is a fever for me” Not “It feels kinda warm in here” Not “I had a chill the other day” Most reliable way of checking the temperature? No axillary temps, please!
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Basic concepts and definitions Systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) At least 2 of the following: Oral temperature > 38 or < 35 C Respiratory rate > 20 or PaCO 2 < 32 mmHg (requires ABG) Heart rate > 90 Leukocytes > 12,000 or 10% bands Sepsis: + microbial source Severe sepsis: + organ dysfunction Septic shock: + hypotension unresponsive to fluids Multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS)
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Sick vs Not Sick Patients with any of the following need IMMEDIATE intervention Altered mental status Respiratory distress Cardiovascular instability Prolonged temp > 41 C = 105.8 F
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Most aren’t critically ill… take a history! Localizing symptoms Atypical symptoms Fever patterns Tubes, lines, drains (incl. pacemakers, heart valves, PICC lines, etc) Living situation (nursing home, dorm, jail, etc) Recent hospitalizations
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Never trust the elderly Symptoms are often atypical May not even mount a fever response Abdominal exam often deceptively benign 3 critical things to do when evaluating fever in the elderly Completely undress and examine skin Chest x-ray (2-view if possible) Urinalysis (straight cath if possible)
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Sepsis: a problem with perfusion For MIS: sepsis is caused by a complex disarray of pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory mediators which are triggered by infection, leading to tissue ischemia, direct tissue injury, alterations in apoptosis For us: sepsis = poor perfusion… fix it Hypotension Elevated lactate Tachycardia Decreased urine output
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How to fix the perfusion problem IV fluids Initial choice: 0.9% NS Optimal volume unknown… usually will get 3-5 liters over first 6 hours Watch for pulmonary edema Vasopressors Initial choice: norepinephrine (Levophed) Consider phenylephrine if tachycardia or dysrhythmias
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Targets: first 6 hours
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ProCESS, 2014: “In a multicenter trial conducted in the tertiary care setting, protocol-based resuscitation of patients in whom septic shock was diagnosed in the emergency department did not improve outcomes.” ARISE, 2014: “In critically ill patients presenting to the emergency department with early septic shock, EGDT did not reduce all-cause mortality at 90 days.” ProMISe, 2015: “In patients with septic shock who were identified early and received intravenous antibiotics and adequate fluid resuscitation, hemodynamic management according to a strict EGDT protocol did not lead to an improvement in outcome.”
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Bonus: empiric abx (if source unknown) Gram-positives and MRSA: vancomycin Gram-negatives: 3 rd - or 4 th generation cephalosporin (eg, ceftriaxone) Pseudomonas: zosyn, ceftazidime
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Bonus: Vasopressors
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