Title: SIRS
1SIRS
- Dr. Jonathan R. Goodall
- M62 Coloproctology Course
- 31st March 2006
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5SIRS
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7SIRS
- Definitions
- Recognising the patient with SIRS
- Management of the patient with SIRS
- Activated Protein C
- Use of Steroids
- Glucose Control
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9SIRS
pring s eluctantly tarting to happen
10SIRS
omething ntrinsically elated to epsis
11SIRS
omething ntensivists are eliably mug about
12SIRS
yndrome nstictively ecognised by urgeons
13SIRS
omething nfrequently ecognised by HOs
14Definitions
- Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (SIRS)
- Severe Sepsis
- Septic Shock
- Refractory Shock
15Definitions
- SIRS 2 or more of
- Temperature gt 38C or lt 36C
- Heart rate gt 90 bpm
- Resp rate gt 20 breaths.min -1 or PaCO2 lt 4.3kPa
(32mmg) - WBCs gt 12 or lt 4 (or gt10 immature forms)
16Definitions
- Sepsis
- SIRS with documented infection site
- Severe Sepsis
- Sepsis organ dysfunction, hypoperfusion or
hypotension - Septic Shock
- Severe sepsis (SBP lt 90mmHg) despite adequate
fluid resuscitation
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20Crit Care Med 2004 Vol. 32 No 3
21- Experts from 11 international organisations
(2003) - Management guidelines that would be of practical
use for the bedside clinician - International effort to increase awareness
improve outcome
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
22Key Recommendations
- Recommendations on groups of treatments
- Total consensus reached on all but two of
recommendations - Most of recommendations are not supported by
high-level evidence
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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24A. Initial Resuscitation
- Resuscitation should begin as soon as condition
is recognised - In first 6 hours should include all of the
following - CVP 8-12mmHg
- MAP gt 65mmHg
- UO gt 0.5ml.kg-1.hr-1
- CvO2 gt 70
- Grade B Early Goal Directed Therapy in the
Treatment of Severe Sepsis. Rivers et al NEJM
2001 3451368-77
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
25B. Diagnosis
- Appropriate cultures should always be obtained
before antimicrobial therapy - At least 2 blood cultures
- One from each IV device gt48 hours old
- Other cultures as appropriate
- Grade D/E
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
26C. Antibiotic Therapy
- Appropriate antimicrobial therapy should be
started within 1 hour of onset Grade E - Initial empirical therapy Grade D
- Focussed after 48-72 hours
- ? Monotherapy
- 7-10 day course Grade E
- Stop if non-infective cause found Grade E
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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28D. Source control
- Evaluate all patients for the presence of a focus
of infection amenable to source control
measures (SCM) (Grade E) - Method of SCM must weigh benefits risks (Grade
E) - Once a source of infection identified, SCM should
be instituted as soon as possible (Grade E) - IV access devices should be removed promptly
(Grade E)
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
29E. Fluid Therapy
- Fluid resuscitation may consist of natural or
artificial colloids or crystalloids. There is no
evidence-based support for one type of fluid over
another. - Rates
- 500-1000ml crystalloids over 30 mins
- 300-500ml colloids over 30 mins
- Grade C
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
30F G Vasopressors Inotropes
- Use when appropriate fluid resuscitation fails to
restore adequate MAP - Noradrenaline or dopamine dobutamine (Grade D)
- Low-dose (renal) dopamine should not be used.
(Grade B) Bellomo et al Lancet 2000
3562139-2143
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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32H. Steroids
- IV hydrocortisone (200-300mg/day) should be used
for 7 days in patients requiring vasopressor
therapy (Grade C) - gt 300mg/day should not be used
- Steroids should not be for the treatment of
sepsis in the absence of shock (Grade E)
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
33I. Activated Protein C
- Recommended in patients at high risk of death
without contraindications (Grade B) Bernard GR et
al, N Engl J Med 2001344699-709
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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35Activated Protein C - properties
- Anticoagulant
- Degrades factor Va VIIIa thereby inhibiting
generation of thrombin - Pro-fibrinolytic
- Promoted fibrinolysis by inhibiting plasminogen
activator inhibitor - Anti-inflammatory
- Direct effects on endothelium and neutrophils
36PROWESS Study Group
- 1690 patients with sepsis enrolled
- Mortality rate 30.8 in placebo group vs 24.7 in
APC group - Relative risk of death reduction 19 absolute
risk reduction 6 (P0.005) - Increased incidence serious bleeding (3.5 vs 2 )
- Bernard GR et al, N Engl J Med 2001344699-709
37M. Glucose Control
- Following initial stablisation maintain blood
glucose lt 8.3 mmol/l - (Grade B) Intensive Insulin Therapy in
Critically Ill Patients. van den Berghe et al N
Engl J Med 20013451359
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
38Intensive Insulin Therapy
- 1548 patients admitted to ICU
- Intensive Treatment Group
- Insulin started if glucose gt 6.1 mmol.l-1
- Glucose controlled 4.4 - 6.1 mmol.l-1
- Conventional Treatment Group
- Insulin started if glucose gt 12 mmol.l-1
- Glucose controlled 10.0 11.1mmol.l-1
van den Berghe NEJM 20013451359
39Intensive Insulin Therapy
- Mortality Rates
- Treatment Group 4.6
- Conventional Group 8.0
- Unbiased risk reduction 32
- Also reduced incidence of complications (eg
septicaemia, acute renal failure)
van den Berghe NEJM 20013451359
40M. Glucose Control
- There is no reason to think these data are not
generalisable to all severely septic patients - Intensive Insulin Therapy in the Medical ICU. van
den Berghe et al N Eng J Med 2006 354 449-461
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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42P. DVT Prophylaxis
- Use unfractionated or LMW heparin
- For patients with contraindication to heparin,
use of a mechanical prophylactic device is
recommended - In very high risk patients, use both
pharmacological and mechanical prophylaxis - Grade A
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
43Q. Stress Ulcer Prophylaxis
- H2 receptor antagonsists are more efficacious
than sucralfate and are the preferred agents - Proton pump inhibitors have not been assessed in
a direct comparison to H2 receptor antagonsists,
and their relative efficacy is not known. - Grade A
Dellinger et al, Crit Care Med 2004 Vol 32, No 3
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45Summary
- SIRS is very common
- SIRS is a difficult problem
- It is a complex disease
- It is not easy to recognise
- Steroids probably useful
- APC is useful
- Tight glucose control is useful (in surgical
patients)
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