Approach to Sepsis and Septic Shock
Sepsis is a life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection, operationally defined as suspected or confirmed infection with SOFA ≥2.
Septic shock is a subset of sepsis characterized by persistent hypotension requiring vasopressors to maintain MAP ≥65 mmHg and serum lactate >2 mmol/L despite adequate fluid resuscitation, reflecting severe circulatory and metabolic dysfunction.
Pathophysiology
Infection → immune activation → cytokine release → endothelial dysfunction and increased capillary permeability → vasodilation with relative intravascular hypovolemia → microcirculatory dysfunction (heterogeneous flow, impaired oxygen extraction) → mitochondrial dysfunction → lactate elevation (reflecting hypoperfusion and metabolic stress) → organ dysfunction
Additional mechanisms include myocardial depression, dysregulated coagulation, and microthrombosis.
1. Etiology and Sources
- Respiratory infections (most common; pneumonia)
- Intra-abdominal infections
- Genitourinary infections
- Skin and soft tissue infections
- Healthcare-associated infections (devices, procedures)
- Fungal or viral infections in high-risk patients
2. Risk Factors
- Advanced age or infancy
- Immunocompromised states
- Chronic comorbidities (e.g., diabetes, CKD, malignancy)
- Indwelling devices
- Recent hospitalization or surgery
3. Clinical Features
3.1 Early (Sepsis)
- Fever or hypothermia
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnea
- Altered mental status
- Leukocytosis or leukopenia
3.2 Septic Shock / Advanced Disease
- Hypotension or vasopressor requirement
- Lactate >2 mmol/L
- Oliguria (<0.5 mL/kg/h)
- Altered mentation
- Progressive multi-organ dysfunction
- Peripheral perfusion may be warm early and cool later
4. Diagnosis and Assessment
- Suspected infection + SOFA ≥2
- Measure lactate as a marker of illness severity and hypoperfusion (interpret in context)
- Obtain blood cultures before antibiotics (do not delay treatment)
- Continuous reassessment of hemodynamics and organ function
Screening (SSC 2026)
- Use early warning scores (e.g., NEWS, NEWS2, MEWS, SIRS)
- Do not use qSOFA alone as a screening tool
5. Management
5.1 Core Principle
Sepsis and septic shock are medical emergencies; initiate treatment immediately
5.2 Antimicrobial Therapy
- Septic shock → administer antimicrobials immediately (within 1 hour)
- Probable or definite sepsis → administer immediately (within 1 hour)
- Possible sepsis (uncertain diagnosis):
- Perform rapid evaluation (within 3 hours)
- Initiate antimicrobials if infection remains likely
Additional principles:
- Start broad-spectrum empiric therapy
- Do not delay antibiotics for biomarkers or imaging
- Reassess daily and de-escalate based on cultures and clinical response
5.3 Fluid Resuscitation
- Administer at least 30 mL/kg IV crystalloid within the first 3 hours
- Use actual body weight (consider adjustment in obesity)
- Prefer balanced crystalloids
- Reassess frequently and individualize further fluid therapy
Dynamic Assessment Tools
- Passive leg raise
- Stroke volume or cardiac output response
- Capillary refill time
- Bedside ultrasound
Avoid both inadequate resuscitation and fluid overload
5.4 Hemodynamic Management
- Target MAP ≥65 mmHg
- First-line vasopressor: Norepinephrine
- Add vasopressin if needed
- Add epinephrine if refractory
- Add dobutamine if myocardial dysfunction with hypoperfusion
- Hydrocortisone 200 mg/day IV in persistent vasopressor-dependent shock
- Vasopressors may be initiated early in unstable patients
5.5 Infection Management and Source Control
- Initiate empiric broad-spectrum antibiotics promptly
- Reassess daily and de-escalate therapy
- Perform early source control when indicated
- Do not delay antibiotics for procalcitonin
5.6 Respiratory Support
- Avoid hyperoxia
- Oxygen targets should be individualized based on patient condition
- HFNC preferred over conventional oxygen
- NIV may be used in selected patients
Mechanical Ventilation (if required)
- Tidal volume: 6 mL/kg predicted body weight
- Plateau pressure ≤30 cmH₂O
- Apply appropriate PEEP strategies
ARDS Adjuncts
- Prone positioning ≥12 to 16 hours per day in moderate to severe ARDS
- Neuromuscular blockade in selected patients
ARDS Diagnosis
- Berlin criteria
- Kigali modification (resource-limited settings)
5.7 Adjunctive Care
- Transfusion: Hb <7 g/dL (restrictive strategy)
- VTE prophylaxis: LMWH preferred
- Glucose control:
- Initiate insulin ≥180 mg/dL
- Target 144 to 180 mg/dL
- Bicarbonate therapy:
- Only if pH ≤7.2 with concomitant AKI (stage 2 to 3)
- Renal replacement therapy:
- Initiate based on standard clinical indications
- Nutrition:
- Early enteral feeding within 24 to 72 hours
6. Septic Shock (Quick Summary)
- Requires vasopressors to maintain MAP ≥65 mmHg despite adequate fluid resuscitation
- Serum lactate >2 mmol/L
- Reflects severe circulatory and metabolic dysfunction
7. Monitoring and Targets
- MAP ≥65 mmHg
- Urine output ≥0.5 mL/kg/h
- Lactate trend (clearance over time)
- Mental status and peripheral perfusion
8. Clinical Pearls
- Sepsis is a time-critical medical emergency
- Early antimicrobials and fluid resuscitation are essential
- Norepinephrine is the first-line vasopressor
- Lactate reflects illness severity and metabolic stress
- Use dynamic reassessment rather than fixed protocols
- Source control is essential for definitive management
- Avoid fluid overload and unnecessary hyperoxia
- Reassess frequently and de-escalate therapy
References
- Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, 22nd Edition
- Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC), 2026
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