Lymphoreticular and Hematopoetic Infections
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FROM SYSTEMIC INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE SYNDROME (SIRS) TO BACTERIAL SEPSIS WITH SHOCK


General Goal: To know the major causes of this disease progression, understand the basic processes that cause the progression from SIRS to septic shock, and describe the basic treatment plan in caring for these patients.

Specific Educational Objectives: The student should be able to:

1. recite the most likely causes of sepsis based on the knowledge of the initial site of infection and where these organisms usually come from (sources of infection).

2. recite the most common causes of anaerobic sepsis and pediatric sepsis.

3. recite the factors that increase the risk of a patient getting sepsis and the patient types most like to get sepsis.

4. recite the major sites of infection that can lead to sepsis.

5. describe the sequence of events that lead to septic shock (know the microbial triggers and the host mediators that led to septic shock). A basic understanding of what types of shock are caused by sepsis.

6. describe the differences between the following: SIRS, sepsis, severe sepsis, septic shock, and MODS.

7. Recite the 3 treatment priorities and understand their importance.

Reading: F.S. Southwick, Infectious Diseases in 30 Days, Chapter 2: The Sepsis Syndrome, 2003, McGraw Hill.

Lecture: Dr. Neal R. Chamberlain

Resources:

eMedicine Online: Septic Shock, by J Stephan Stapczynski, MD, Chair, Associate Professor, Department of
Emergency Medicine, University of Kentucky Chandler Medical Center (last revised 0/01/00;  http://www.emedicine.com/cgi-bin/foxweb.exe/showsection@d:/em/ga?book=emerg&topicid=533).

Balk, R.A., Casey, L.C., Sepsis and Septic Shock. Critical Care Clinics. April 2000.

Angus DC, Linde-Zwirble WT, Lidicker J, et al.: Epidemiology of severe sepsis in the United States: analysis of incidence, outcome and associated costs of care. Crit Care Med 2001, 29:1303-1310


OVERVIEW

Septic shock is the most common cause of mortality in the intensive care unit. It is the 10th leading cause of death overall (2003) and is the most common cause of shock encountered by internists in the U.S. Despite aggressive treatment mortality ranges from 15% in patients with sepsis to 40-60% in patients with septic shock. There is a continuum of clinical manifestations from SIRS to sepsis to severe sepsis to septic shock to Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS).


ETIOLOGY
Viruses and fungi can cause septic shock. Bacterial infections are the most common cause of septic shock. Almost any bacterium can cause bacteremia. Bacteremia is not necessary for the development of septic shock. Only 30-50 percent of patients with sepsis have positive blood culture results.
The infection site helps in determining the most likely cause of a patient's sepsis
Suspected Source of Sepsis
 
Lung
Abdomen
Skin/Soft Tissue
Urinary Tract
CNS
Major Community Acquired Pathogens Streptococcus pneumoniae
Haemophilus influenzae
Legionella sp.
Chlamydia pneumoniae
Escherichia coli
Bacteroides fragilis
Streptococcus pyogenes
Staphylococcus aureus
Clostridium sp.

Polymicrobial infections
Aerobic gram negative bacilli
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Anaerobes
Staphylococcus sp.

Escherichia coli
Klebsiella sp.
Enterobacter sp.
Proteus sp.
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Neiserria meningitidis
Listeria monocytogenes
Escherichia coli
Haemophilus influenzae
Major Nosocomial pathogens Aerobic gram negative bacilli Aerobic gram negative bacilli
Anaerobes
Candida sp.
Staphylococcus aureus
Aerobic gram negative bacilli
Aerobic gram negative bacilli
Enterococcus sp.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Escherichia coli
Klebsiella sp.
Staphylococcus sp.

Special Concerns:

Elderly patients are more susceptible to sepsis, have less physiologic reserve to tolerate the insult from infection, and are more likely to have underlying diseases, all of which adversely impact survival. In addition, elderly patients are more likely to have atypical or nonspecific presentations when septic.

S. pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis, or S aureus usually causes sepsis in the child. Sepsis due to H. influenzae was very common however since the introduction of  the Hib vaccine, invasive H. influenzae infections have virtually disappeared.

Sepsis and septic shock in the immunocompromised patient is associated with a wide variety of bacteria and fungi.


Death due to this disease has increased 82.6% from 1979 to 1997 (4.2 deaths/100,000). Around 750,000 cases of sepsis are diagnosed per year.  Around 31% die each year. Shock develops in about 40% of septic patients. The annual health care cost from caring for patients with sepsis is $5-10 billion.

Gram-negative septic shock: comprises 1/2 of total cases of sepsis, 115,000 deaths/year. As a group gram negative bacteria cause more deaths due to sepsis.

Gram-positive septic shock: more gram positive cases of septic shock are seen due to the increased incidence in pneumonia and in the use of intravascular devices, 1/2 of cases sepsis.

Factors contributing to the increasing incidence of sepsis:

  1. aggressive oncological chemotherapy and radiation therapy
  2. widespread us of corticosteroid and immunosuppressive therapies for organ transplants and inflammatory diseases
  3. longer lives of patients predisposed to sepsis, the elderly, diabetics, cancer patients, patients with major organ failure, and with granulocyopenia.
  4. Neonates are more likely to develop sepsis (ex. group B Streptococcal infections).
  5. increased use of invasive devices such as surgical protheses, inhalation equipment, and intravenous and urinary catheters.
  6. indiscriminate use of antimicrobial drugs that create conditions of overgrowth, colonization, and subsequent infection by aggressive, antimicrobial-resistant organisms.
Source: (usually an endogenous source of infection)
  1. intestinal tract
  2. oropharynx
  3. instrumentation sites
  4. contaminated inhalation therapy equipment
  5. IV fluids.
Most frequent sites of infection: Lungs, abdomen, and urinary tract. Other sources include the skin/soft tissue and the CNS.

The source of the infection is an important determinant of clinical outcome. Severe sepsis is most likely to occur in patients with nosocomial pneumonia. Patients with intra-abdominal infection and polymicrobial bacteremia or postoperative wound infections and bacteremia are at significant risk for severe sepsis. Bacteremia associated with intravascular catheters or indwelling urinary catheters carries a lower risk of developing septic shock.

Patients at increased risks of developing sepsis:

  1. Underlying diseases: neutropenia, solid tumors, leukemia, dysproteinemias, cirrhosis of the liver, diabetes, AIDS, serious chronic conditions.
  2. Surgery or instrumentation: catheters.
  3. Prior drug therapy: Immuno-suppressive drugs, especially with broad-spectrum antibiotics.
  4. Age: males, above 40 y; females, 20-45 y.
  5. Miscellaneous conditions: childbirth, septic abortion, trauma and widespread burns, intestinal ulceration.

PATHOGENESIS

Microbial triggers of disease:

  1. gram-negative bacteria= endotoxin, formyl peptides, exotoxins, and proteases
  2. gram-positive bacteria= exotoxins, superantigens (toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST), streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin A (SpeA)), enterotoxins, hemolysins, peptidoglycans, and lipotechoic acid
  3. fungal cell wall material.
Sequence of events: Sepsis can be simply defined as a spectrum of clinical conditions caused by the immune response of a patient to infection that is characterized by systemic inflammation and coagulation. It includes the full range of response from systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) to organ dysfunction to multiple organ failure and ultimately death.

This is a very complex sequence of events and much work still needs to be done to completely understand how a patient goes from SIRS to septic shock. Patients with septic shock have a biphasic immunological response.  Initially they manifest an overwhelming inflammatory response to the infection. This is most likely due to the pro-inflammatory cytokines Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF), IL-1, IL-12, Interferon gamma (IFNgamma), and IL-6.

The body then regulates this response by producing anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10), soluble inhibitors [TNF receptors, IL-1 receptor type II, and IL-1RA (an inactive form of IL-1)]. Which is manifested in the patient by a period of immunodepression. Persistence of this hyporesponsiveness is associated with increased risk of nosocomial infection and death.

 This systemic inflammatory cascade is initiated by various bacterial products.  These bacterial products (gram-negative bacteria= endotoxin, formyl peptides, exotoxins, and proteases,  gram-positive bacteria=   exotoxins, superantigens (toxic shock syndrome toxin (TSST), streptococcal pyrogenic exotoxin A (SpeA)), enterotoxins, hemolysins, peptidoglycans, and lipotechoic acid, and fungal cell wall material) bind to cell receptors on the host's macrophages and activate regulatory proteins [Nuclear Factor Kappa B (NFkB)].  Endotoxin activates the regulatory proteins by interacting with several receptors. The CD receptors pool the LPS-LPS binding protein complex on the surface of the cell and then the TLR receptors translate the signal into the cells.

 The pro-inflammatory cytokines produced are tumor necrosis factor (TNF), Interleukins 1, 6 and 12 and Interferon gamma (IFNgamma).  These cytokines can act directly to affect organ function or they may act indirectly through secondary mediators.  The secondary mediators include nitric oxide, thromboxanes, leukotrienes, platelet-activating factor, prostaglandins, and complement.  TNF and IL-1 (as well as endotoxin) can also cause the release of tissue-factor by endothelial cells leading to fibrin deposition and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC).

 Then these primary and secondary mediators cause the activation of the coagulation cascade, the complement cascade and the production of prostaglandins and leukotrienes. Clots lodge in the blood vessels which lowers profusion of the organs and can lead to multiple organ system failure. In time this activation of the coagulation cascade depletes the patient's ability to make clot resulting in DIC and ARDS.

The cumulative effect of this cascade is an unbalanced state, with inflammation dominant over antiinflammation and coagulation dominant over fibrinolysis. Microvascular thrombosis, hypoperfusion, ischemia, and tissue injury result. Severe sepsis, shock, and multiple organ dysfunction may occur, leading to death.


Signs and Symptoms

Symptoms of sepsis are usually nonspecific and include fever, chills, and constitutional symptoms of fatigue, malaise, anxiety, or confusion. These symptoms are not pathognomonic for infection and may be seen in a wide variety of noninfectious inflammatory conditions. They may be absent in serious infections, especially in elderly individuals.

The following is the 1992 Consensus Conference's definitions for diagnosis of SIRS to MODS.

CONSENSUS CONFERENCE DEFINITIONS*

*Data from the American College of Chest Physicians: Society of Critical Care Medicine Consensus Conference. Definitions for sepsis and organ failure and guidelines for the use of innovative therapies in sepsis. Crit. Care Med. 20:864-875, 1992

Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS): Patient presents with two or more of the following criteria.

  1. temperature > 38°C or < 36°C
  2. heart rate > 90 beats/minute
  3. respiration > 20/min or PaCO2 < 32mm Hg
  4. leukocyte count > 12,000/mm3, < 4,000/mm3 or > 10% immature (band) cells
Sepsis: SIRS plus a documented infection site (documented by positive culture for organisms from that site). Blood cultures do NOT need to be positive. While SIRS, sepsis, and septic shock are associated commonly with bacterial infection, bacteremia may not be present. Bacteremia is the presence of viable bacterial within the liquid component of blood. Bacteremia may be transient, as is seen commonly after injury to a mucosal surface, primary (without an identifiable focus of infection), or more commonly secondary, to an intravascular or extravascular focus of infection.

Severe Sepsis: Sepsis associated with organ dysfunction, hypoperfusion abnormalities, OR hypotension. Hypoperfusion abnormalities include but are not limited to:

  1. lactic acidosis,
  2. oliguria,
  3. or an acute alteration in mental status.
Septic Shock: Sepsis-induced hypotension despite fluid resuscitation PLUS hypoperfusion abnormalities.

Organ Dysfunctions associated with Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock:

Lungs: early fall in arterial PO2, Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS): capillary-leakage into alveoli; tachypnea, hyperpnea

Kidneys (acute renal failure): oliguria, anuria, azotemia, proteinuria

Liver- elevated levels of serum bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, cholestatic jaundice

Digestive tract- nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and ileus

Skin - ecthyma gangrenosum (think Pseudomonas aeruginosa in neutropenic patients), Petechia or purpura (think Neisseria meningitidis or Rickettsia rickettsia (if evidence of tick bite)), Hemorrhage or bullous lesions in patient who has eaten raw oysters (Vibrio vulnificus), generalized erythroderma (Toxic Shock Syndrome= Staphylococcus aureus or Streptococcus pyogenes)

Heart- cardiac output is initially normal or elevated,

Brain - confusion

Multiple Organ Dysfunction Syndrome (MODS): Presence of altered organ function in an acutely ill patient such that homeostasis cannot be maintained without intervention.


Mortality increases with increase in number of SIRS symptoms and in severity of the disease process. (From Rangel-Frausto, M., Pttet, D., Costigan, M., et. al. The natural history of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). JAMA 273:117-123, 1995)

Complications:

Adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)
Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
Acute Renal failure (ARF)
Intestinal bleeding
Liver failure
Central Nervous system dysfunction
Heart failure
Death
The reported incidence of these complications in SIRS and sepsis in different studies is about 19% for CNS dysfunction, 2-8% for ARDS, 12% for liver failure, 9-23% for ARF, and 8-18% for DIC.

In septic shock, ARDS has been observed in about 18%, DIC in about 38%, and renal failure in about 50%.


DIAGNOSIS

The diagnosis of sepsis requires a high index of suspicion, the taking of an EXCELLENT history, physical examination, appropriate laboratory tests, and a close follow-up of hemodynamic status.

History
Helps in determining if the infection was community or nosocomially acquired and if the patient is immunocompromised. Important details include exposure to animals, travel, tick bites, occupational hazards, alcohol use, seizures, loss of consciousness, medications, and underlying diseases that may predispose the patient to specific infectious agents. Some clues to a septic event include:

  1. Fever or unexplained signs with malignancy or instrumentation
  2. Hypotension Oliguria or anuria
  3. Tachypnea or hyperpnea Hypothermia without obvious cause
  4. Bleeding

Physical Examination
A thorough physical exam is essential. In all neutropenic patients and in patients with as suspected pelvic infection the physical exam should include rectal, pelvic, and genital examinations. Such exams may reveal rectal, perirectal, and/or perineal abscesses, pelvic inflammatory disease and/or abscesses, or prostatitis.

Laboratory data

Respiratory alkalosis signals impending shock that is reversible with fluid resuscitation. Metabolic acidosis can develop just prior to hypotension or can occur at the same time. Metabolic acidosis can signal the beginning of the end for the patient. Treatment should be instituted before metabolic acidosis begins.

Recent studies indicate that procalcitonin (PCT) is a good nonspecific marker for differentiating systemic bacterial inflammatory responses from nonbacterial systemic inflammatory responses. One study (Ann Rheum Dis. 2003;62:337-340) suggests that  "patients with fever or inflammatory syndrome who have PCT levels greater than 1.2 ng/ml, we consider that bacterial infection should be sought and antibiotic treatment started even before the results of the bacteriological investigations are obtained. This approach is even more strongly recommended in patients with inflammatory disease given immunosuppressive treatment. In contrast, once tuberculosis and mycobacterial infection have been ruled out, normal PCT levels do not argue in favor of bacterial infection." 

Other tests tests include CBC with differential count, C-reactive protein, urinalysis, coagulation profile, glucose, blood urea, nitrogen, creatinine, electrolytes, liver function tests, lactic acid level, arterial blood gas, electrocardiogram, and a chest X-ray.  Cultures of blood, sputum, urine, and other obviously infected sites should be performed. Gram's stain of normally sterile sites (blood, CSF, articular fluid, pleural space) by aspiration. At least 2 sets (some believe 3) of blood cultures should be obtained over a 24hr period. Sample volume: there is often less than 1 bacterium/ml in adults (higher in children). Draw 10-20 ml per sampling in adults (1-5 ml in children) and inoculate both trypticase soy broth and thioglycolate broth. Sample time: for intermittent fever spikes, the bacteremia is most prominent 0.5 hr before the spike. If antibiotic therapy has been initiated, some antibiotics can be deactivated in the clinical lab.

Depending on the patient's clinical status and associated risks other studies could include abdominal X-ray, CAT scans, MRI, 2D echocardiograms, and/or lumbar puncture.

Other laboratory findings:

EARLY SEPSIS; leukocytosis with left shift, thrombocytopenia, hyperbilirubinemia, and proteinuria. Leukopenia may occur. Neutrophils may contain toxic granulations, Dohle bodies, or cytoplasmic vacuoles. Hyperventilation commonly induces respiratory alkalosis. Hypoxemia correctable with oxygen. Diabetics can develop hyperglycemia. Serum lipids are elevated.

LATER ON: Thrombocytopenia worsens with prolongation of thrombin time, decreased fibrinogen, and presence of D-dimers suggesting DIC. Azotemia, and hyperbilirubinemia are more prominent. Aminotranferases (liver enzymes) become elevated. When respiratory muscles fatigue the accumulation of serum lactate occurs. Metabolic acidosis (increased anion gap) supervenes the respiratory alkalosis. Hypoxemia not correctable even with 100% oxygen. Diabetic hyperglycemia can precipitate ketoacidosis worsening the hypotension.


THERAPY

Three priorities.

1. Immediate Stabilization of the Patient.
The immediate concern for patients with severe sepsis is reversal of life-threatening abnormalities (ABCs: airway, breathing, circulation). Altered mental status or depressed level of consciousness secondary to sepsis may require immediate protection of the patient's airway. Intubation may also be necessary to deliver higher oxygen concentrations. Mechanical ventilation may help lower oxygen consumption by the respiratory muscles and increase oxygen availibility for other tissues. Circulation may be compromised and significant decreases in blood pressure may require aggressive combined empiric therapy with fluids (with crystalloids or colloids) and inotropes/vasopressors (dopamine, dobutamine, phenylephrine, epinephrine, or norepinephrine). In severe sepsis monitoring of the circulation may be necessary. Normal CVP (central venous pressure) is 10-15 cm of 0.9% NaCl; normal PAW (pulmonary arterial wedge pressure) is 14-18 mm Hg; maintain adequate plasma volume with fluid infusion.
2. The blood must be rapidly cleared of microorganisms. 3. The original focus of infection must be treated. New Drug in Treating Severe Sepsis:
Eli Lilly and Company announced in 2001 the results of a Phase III clinical trial that demonstrated drotrecogin alfa (recombinant human activated protein C, Xigris used to be called Zovant) could reduce the relative risk of death from sepsis with associated acute organ dysfunction (known as severe sepsis) by 19.4 percent. These patients had Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II Scores (APACHE II) of 25-53. To treat with this protein the patient should have an APACHE II score of between 25 and 53. Please note that patients treated with this protein also are at an increased risk of bleeding. This risk is highest during infusion of the protein.

It is the first agent approved by the FDA effective in the treatment of severe sepsis proven to reduce mortality. Activated Protein C (Xigris) mediates many actions of body homeostasis. It is a potent agent for the:

  1. suppression of inflammation [a. directly suppresses monocyte production of nuclear factor-kB (NF-kB, b. inhibits thrombin generation which is proinflammatory, c. minimizes the expression of E-selectin on endothelial walls, producing dose-dependent inhibition of leukocyte adhesion at the site of infection. Reduced leukocyte/endothelial interaction down regulates oxygen radical release, decreasing vascular damage.],
  2. prevention of microvascular coagulation [a. proteolytic inactivation of Factors Va and VIIIa preventing thrombin formation.]
  3. reversal of impaired fibrinolysis [a. binds with plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), causing inactivation of PAI-1. This in turn reduces the inhibition of tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), allowing t-PA to stimulate fibrinolysis. Fibrin is broken down, and microcirculation is restored.].

Avoid trauma to mucosal surfaces that are normally colonized by Gram-negative bacteria.

Use trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole prophylactically in leukemic children.

Use topical silver nitrate, silver sulfadiazine, or sulfamylon prophylactically in burn patients.

Apply polymyxin spray to the posterior pharynx to prevent nosocomial Gram-negative pneumonia.

Sterilization of the bowel aerobic flora with polymyxin or gentamycin with vancomycin and nystatin were effective in reducing Gram-negative sepsis in neutropenic patients.

Protective environments for patients at risk have not been to successful because most infections have endogenous origins.

To protect neonates from Group B strep sepsis obtain vaginal/rectal swab samples at 35 to 37 weeks' gestation. Culture for Streptococcus agalactiae (leading cause of neonatal sepsis). If positive for Group B strep then give the mother intrapartum penicillin This will lower Group B strep infections by about 78%.


Revised 8/24/04
Send comments and email to Neal R. Chamberlain, Ph.D., nchamberlain@atsu.edu
©2004 Neal R. Chamberlain, Ph.D., All rights reserved.