Infection and sepsis - NUS
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Transcript Infection and sepsis - NUS
INFECTION AND SEPSIS
Surrounded by pathogens
Infection is the exception
Protective from infection
Physical barriers
Chemical barriers
Immunological function
Physical and Chemical
Barriers to Infection
Skin
stronger in hands and feet
sebaceous secretions lower pH
Mucous membranes
ciliary function
mucous barrier
acid mileu in stomach
Barriers breached in Surgery
Barriers Breached in Trauma
Immune Defense
Humoral defense
antibodies
complement
Cellular defense
Cytokines
potential for deleterious effects
Interaction of mechanisms
Breakdown of Host Defense
Physical, chemical and immunological
breakdown -act synergistically
e.g. patient with
diabetes
immunosuppresion
surgery
Potential for deleterious effects
Fourniers Gangrene
Commensal Microbial Flora
Important for immune development
Occupy binding sites for pathogens
Provide mucobacterial barrier
Anerobic bacteria
present in greatest quantity in GIT
Greatest diversity
Prevent invasion by gram neg. aerobes
Breakdown of Host Defense
- GIT Flora
Transmigration of bacteria
Lack of feeding
Overuse of antibiotics
Absence of bile
Protein malnutrition
Immune deficiency
ICU patient fed enteraly
To preserve GIT integrity
Infection Manifestation
Local signs
Systemic signs
Fever, somnolence, confusion, ileus,
hypotension
Lab tests
pain,redness,swelling, warmth loss of
function
TW,polymorphs, Cultures
Non infective- causes may manifest as
infection
Common Infections
Wound infection
Initial inoculum overwhelms host defense
Occurs at 5 - 7 days post op
Factors
host - immune suppression, DM, renal failure
surgeon - technique
environment - contamination
Common Infections
Types of Wounds
1. Clean - no viscus, no sterile breach
2. Clean contaminated - controlled entry into
viscus
3. Contaminated - emergency bowel resection,
perforated appendix
4. Dirty - heavy contamination / long duration
Antibiotics used
type 2 as prophylaxis
type 3,4 as treatment
Wound Closure
Wounds
Closure by
primary intention
secondary intention
Timing of closure
delayed primary closure
secondary closure
Closure by Secondary Intention
Intraabdominal Infection
Defense
Bacterial clearance - stomata between
mesothelial cells under diaphragm lead to
lymph vessels
Phagocytosis - both resident and recruited
phagocytes
Sequestration - by fibrin rich inflammatory
exudate, with omentum/viscera
Intraabdomianal Infection
Signs of peritonitis
Pain
Posture
sharp in character, well localised at first
spreads to surrounding areas
involuntary guarding, rigidity
absent bowel sounds
lying still, rapid breathing ,no movement
General condition
ill, septic, dehydrated, hypotension
Intraabdominal Infection
Usually viscus perforation
Isolates
colon worse than upper GIT
aerobic - E. Coli, klebsiella other
enterobacter, strep, enterococci,
proteus, pseudomonas
anaerobic - bacteroides, Clostridium
Treatment is surgical and aggressive
antibiotic treatment
Enterocutaneous Fistula
Common Post Surgical
Infections
Pneumonia
Protein malnourished
upper abdominal wounds ® poor cough
bed bound - atelectasis
elderly
ventilator
Occurs from 3 days post op
careful clinical exam,CXR
Routine chest physiotherapy
Common Post Surgical
Infections
Urinary Tract Infection
catheters
dehydration
Remove catheters early
Ensure hydration
Antimicrobial therapy
Common Post Surgical
Infections
Catheter and prosthetic devices
I/v canulas
central lines
mesh
Skin organisms- S aureus, S epidermidis
Aseptic technique
Remove if infected
Less Common Post
Surgical Infections
Necrotising soft tissue infection
Parotitis
Sinusitis
Tonsillitis
Treatment of Infection
General principles
incise and drain pus
antibiotics as needed
debride dead tissue
remove foreign bodies
Antibiotic Therapy
Prophylaxis
Short course to prevent infection
Must be on board before contamination
Antibiotics with activity against expected
inoculation organisms
Avoid extended spectrum agents
Post op benefit not proven
Topical antibiotics - not proven
Antibiotic Therapy
Empirical therapy
based on clinical information
search for source must continue
limit duration of empirical therapy
use known institution pattern of infection
multi agent vs broad agent
Antibiotic Therapy
Directed therapy
target identified pathogens
choose suitable efficacy /minimal
toxicity agent
cover aerobic and anaerobic if
likelihood exist for both
extended spectrum as last resort
Multiple System
Organ Failure
AKA - Gram neg. bacterial sepsis
30% mortality
Healthy and compromised host
3-13 cases per 1000 admissions
Nosocomial
Multiple System Organ Failure
Factors
Host compromise
Elderly, disability
Malnutrition
Antimicrobial therapy
Major surgery
Cavity manipulation
Immunosuppression e.g. steroids
MSOF
Fever
Acidosis, hypoxemia
Disordered oxygen and substrate use
Hyperglycaemia
Decreased systemic vascular resistance
Elevated cardiac output
Hypotension
MSOF
Evidence for LPS - endotoxin
LPS
O antigen - specific for each organism
core LPS
membrane lipid A
LPS - EFFECTS
non specific polyclonal b cell proliferation
macrophage activation, cytokine release
hypotension, hypoxemia
bacterial translocation
complement and coagulation activation
platelet and white cell margination
LPS - Mechanism
Direct effect of bacteria
Indirect (mediated) effect
trigger macrophages to release TNFa, IL-1,
IL-6, aIFN
TNFa, IL-1, - primary mediators but may
be deleterious in large amounts
aIFN- causes continued activation of
macrophages
Permeability defects in microcirculation
ARDS, GUT, Hepatic, renal failure
Problem
A 23 year old man
had a perforated
appendix. Three
days post op this
was his temperature
chart. What is your
interpretation.
Problem
What is your choice for antibiotic
prophylaxis for
colorectal surgery
biliary surgery
upper GI surgery
Problem
A 75 year old diabetic had an operation for
perforated diverticular disease. His wound
was found to be infected on the 5th POD.
What factors may have contributed to this?