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Pediatric Sepsis Dr. S. Veroukis Pediatric Critical Care Winnipeg Children’s Hospital Winnipeg, MB CANADA Objective • Review of the 2007 Clinical Practice Guidelines on Pediatric and Neonatal Septic Shock Guidelines • Aim to standardize care of the septic patient to decrease mortality • Expected mortality if guidelines adhered to are expected to be very low: – 0-5% for previously healthy children – 10% for children with chronic illness Recognizing Sepsis • Clinical triad: fever, tachycardia, vasodilation plus change in level of consciousness and urine output is the most common presentation of sepsis • Our hospital has a screening tool • Used for the febrile patient who also has changes in vital signs or level of consciousness SIRS • SIRS = Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome • 2 out of the 4 must be met, and 1 out of the two must be either a) or b) – a) core temperature >38.5 degC or <36degC – b) leukocyte count elevated or depressed or > 10% immature neutrophils – c) tachycardia, or bradycardia (<1yr old) – d) tachypnea or need for mechanical ventilation Sepsis Definition • Sepsis is defined as a condition meeting the SIRS definition in the presence of suspected or proven infection. • Septic shock is Sepsis with cardiovascular dysfunction (hypotension, poor perfusion, elevated lactate) Recommendations for Pediatric Septic Shock Clinical Diagnosis • Suspected or proven infection • Hypothermia or hyperthermia • Signs of inadequate tissue perfusion: – Decreased mental status – Prolonged capillary refill >2sec, diminished pulses, narrow pulse pressure (cold shock) – Brisk capillary refill, bounding pulses, wide pulse pressure (warm shock) – Decreased urine output <1ml/kg/hr The First Hour of Resuscitation (Emergency Room) • Push 20cc/kg of Crystalloid or Colloid up to 60cc/kg IV or Intraosseous • Start antibiotics (eg. Vancomycin, Cefotaxime) • Correct hypoglycemia and hypocalcemia • Need to give fluids until capillary refill and peripheral pulses are normalized or until hepatomegaly and/or rales develop Airway and Ventilation • During the first hour, the work of breathing may increase, oxygen saturation may decrease • May need to intubate • 40% of cardiac output is used for work of breathing • Recommended medications: atropine and ketamine(0.5-1.5mg/kg IV or IO) Fluid Refractory Septic Shock • Dopamine IV or IO • May need to start second inotrope – Cold shock: (low CO, high SVR) choose epinephrine IV or IO – If warm shock (high CO, low SVR) choose norepinephrine • Need to establish central venous access soon in order to run inotropes at central concentrations Cold Shock • Characterized by – Tachycardia – Cold extremities – Weak pulses, prolonged capillary refill – Elevated blood pressure with narrow pulse pressure – Usually Cardiac Output is low but Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR) is high Warm Shock • Characterized by – Tachycardia – Low BP especially diastolic blood pressure – Warm extremities, brisk capillary refill – Bounding pulses – Wide pulse pressure (from low Diastolic BP) – Usually a state of high Cardiac Output but low SVR Further Therapy • Maintenance fluids should be started : – D10WNS solution to run at maintenance – Ng if intubated – Foley to accurately measure urine output – Frequent vitals (hourly) – Treat temperature – If intubated needs sedation: most frequent fentanyl and midazolam infusions Fluid and Catecholamine Resistant Shock • When fluid boluses and inotropes have not • corrected poor perfusion, decreased LOC and urine output Consider hydrocortisone therapy especially for those patients at risk: – – – – Adrenal or pituitary insufficiency Purpura fulminans History of steroid treatment Dosing: 2-50mg/kg/day (if possible take random cortisol level first) (should be >496nmol/L or >18mcg/dL) Intensive Care • Patient can be transferred to Intensive Care at any point • Central venous access to be established • Obtain central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) • Surrogate for cardiac output and tissue oxygenation Central Venous Saturation • If ScvO2 <70% then cardiac output is not • sufficient to keep up with the body’s demands Need to improve oxygen delivery by: – improving fluid status (fluid boluses) – Increasing oxygen carrying capacity (packed RBC transfusion) – Improving cardiac contractility (inotropes/vasopressors) – Improving cardiac output by afterload reduction (milrinone, dobutamine, nitroprusside) Cold Shock with Normal Blood Pressure • Titrate fluid and epinephrine to have ScvO2 >70% • Maintain Hb>100g/L • If ScvO2 <70%, add an afterload reducer like milrinone, nitroprusside, nitroglycerin Cold Shock with Low BP • Titrate fluid and epinephrine, to meet ScvO2 • • • >70% Maintain Hb >100g/L If still hypotensive consider norepinephrine If ScvO2 <70% despite fluids, blood transfusion and increased epinephrine infusion, then consider afterload reduction (milrinone, dobutamine) Warm Shock with Low Blood Pressure • Titrate fluid and norephinephrine to ScvO2>70% • If still hypotensive, consider vasopressin or low dose epinephrine Persistant Catecholamine Resistant Shock • Rule out pericardial effusion, pneumothorax, congenital cardiac lesion (duct dependent lesion) in a neonate • Consider thyroid replacement, IVIG • More fluids, packed RBC, FFP, addition of other inotropes, pressors, or afterload reduction • If not reversed by any of these measures, consider ECMO (extracorporeal membrane oxygenation) Fluid Removal • Patients will get lots of fluid, even up to • • 200cc/kg in 24hr period Capillary leak from SIRS edematous skin, pulmonary edema, ascites and risk of abdominal compartment syndrome If kidneys can not produce enough urine, and patient is 10% fluid overloaded, may use diuretics, peritoneal dialysis, CRRT to remove fluid Outcomes • Early initiated, goal directed therapy has made great improvement in pediatric sepsis survival • Oliveira et al showed that by following the recommendations, mortality in pediatric sepsis was reduced from 39% to 12% Summary • Recognizing Sepsis early is important in decreasing mortality – Consider sepsis in the patient with fever, tachycardia, and altered mental status • Fluid boluses to begin within 5 minutes of suspecting sepsis – Bolus 20cc/kg up to 60cc/kg in 15-20mins – Start antibiotics as soon as possible Summary • Start peripheral or central dopamine if fluid refractory shock – IV or IO; establish central venous access if possible • Titrate fluids, norepinephrine, epinephrine, packed red blood cells to ensure – Tachycardia, capillary refill, pulses and BP normalize – Lactate within normal, ScvO2>70% – Urine output >1mg/kg/hr Summary • For persistent severe septic shock consider the following: – Hydrocortisone – Thyroid replacement – ECMO – IVIG Thank-you!