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CASE PRESENTATION ``Heroes``. Isabel Alonzo-Proulx, CCFP(EM). Case . 19 y.o.,female c/o diarrhea and vomiting Sudden onset, profuse for last 8-10 hrs Some diffuse abdo pain Presents to ED in evening: BP 100/65 P 95 T 37.8b Looks anxious,feels weak, has been tolerating PO for last hour.
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CASE PRESENTATION``Heroes`` Isabel Alonzo-Proulx, CCFP(EM)
Case • 19 y.o.,female • c/o diarrhea and vomiting • Sudden onset, profuse for last 8-10 hrs • Some diffuse abdo pain • Presents to ED in evening: • BP 100/65 P 95 T 37.8b • Looks anxious,feels weak, has been tolerating PO for last hour
Case cont... • HPI: • Ø prodrome • Ø antibiotics in last 6 months • Ø pregnant: started n menses 3 days ago • Travel: came back from Costa Rica 3 weeks ago, lived in families, has not been sick since • PMHx: • Ø previous Sx • Never pregnant
Case cont... • O/E: • Mucous are dry • CV n • Pneumo n • Abdomen: slightly distended, BS+, diffuse tenderness, no guarding, no rebound CVA equivocal bilat • Skin n
Case cont... • Staff comes in... • Looks sick • Asks for rectal T: 40 • Orders: • IV: 1L NS bolus • CBC, SMA-7, LFT’s, blood cultures X2 • U/A and culture • B-HCG • Stool cultures x2, parasites, and C.Diff
Case cont... • Results: • WBC 13 500 • U/A : RBC ++++, 1-5 leukos • Creat 86 • Hb 139 • Platelets 190 • Urinary B-HCG -
Case cont... • Dx Pyelonephritis? • Started on Cipro • Observed in ER • 4 hrs later, weakness and syncope • BP: 90/40, obtunded • Non-pitting edema of face and neck • Sent to ressuc • Volume ressucitated
Case cont... • Hypothesis? • DDX ?
Case cont... • LABs repeated: • Creat 86, now 100 • Hb 139 now 90 • Platelets 190 now 100 • U/S abdomen and pelvis: • splenomegalia 16 cm • mesenteric adenitis • n otherwise
Case cont... • DDx: • Acute pyelonephritis? • Septic shock? • PID? • HUS? • Leptospirosis? • Gastroenteritis? • Tick Typhus?
And now... • Pt develops a rash:
Case cont... • DDX : • Kawasaki disease? • Reye syndrome? • Erythema multiforma? • Rocky Mountain spotted fever?
Staphyloccocal Toxic Shock Syndrome Staph TSS
Staphylococcus • Gram positive cocci:
S.Aureus - Pathologies • Local invasion and tissular destruction: • Impetigo • Cellulitis • Endocarditis • ... • Toxin mediated • TSS • Staphyloccocal exfoliation syndrome • Food poisoning
S. Aureus - Epidemiology • Reservoir – Human • Asymptomatic carriers: • Naso-pharynx • Rectum • Perineum: 98% of women w TSS compared w control subjects • Cutaneous colonisation – brief, repetitive • Transmission – person to person
Population General population HD patients DB insulin Desensitivation therapy patients IV drug users Carrier rate (%) 25 75 50 50 40 S. Aureus – Carrier rate
STSS - Historical 1978 – Todd and Fishaut first describe STSS • Acute febrile illness in 7 children • Development of shock • Association w staphylococcus aureus 1981 –US epidemic • TSS identified in 941 pts • 812 menstrual cases; otherwise healthy women • Association w hyperabsorbant tampons use Drastic drop in incidence since 1980 Now 50% of case are nonmentrual
Therapeutic Product Directorate: TPD-Web Toxic shock syndrome and tampons : the risk remains • US: annual incidence STSS: • 1-5 cases per 100 000 women in menstruation • > 90% in female 15-19y • Mortality 3.3%
STSS – Risk factors • Menses • Tampons : increased risk 33 times in susceptible women • Nasal packing • Young age • Previous STSS • Vaginal – postpartum or following abortion • Surgical wounds: hernia repair, mammoplasty, arthroscopy • Septorhinoplasty • Influenza or influenza-like illness
STSS – Pathogenesis • Toxic shock syndrome toxin-1 (TSST-1) • 90-100% of mentrual-related cases (MRTSS) • 40-60% of nonmenstrual cases (NMTSS) • Enterotoxin B: 23% • Enterotoxin C: 2% • Enhanced production: • Neutral vaginal pH • Increase in vaginal pO2 and pCO2 • Synthetic fibers in tampon composition
STSS – Pathogenesis • TSST-1 & enterotoxins = Superantigens: • Nonspecific T-lymphocyte stimulation without normal antigenic recognition • Ad 20% Result: massive production of cytokines • Release of IL-1, IL-2, TNF, interferon
STSS – Pathogenesis • Immunitary response from host plays an important role in pathogenesis • 70-80% of 18 y.o. have antibodies to TSST-1 • 90-95% at 40 y.o. • Pts who dev STSS are unable to produce antibodies • Frequent recidival
STSS – Clinical presentation • Sx on presentation: • Tachycardia 80% • Fever 70-81% • Hypotension 44-65% • Confusion 55% • Localized erythema 44-65% • Scarlatin-like rash 4%
STSS – Clinical presentation • Rapid onset of sx: • Day 3-4 of menses • Day 2 post-operative
STSS – Dx criteria • CDC 1990: Clinical manifestations • Fever >38.9 • Rash – diffuse macular erythrodema • Desquamation – 1-2 after onset, palms and soles • Hypotension (SBP<90 mmHg) • Multisystem involvement(3+): • GI (V, diarrhea, abdo pain) • Muscular (myalgias, CK X 2) • Mucous membrane (vagnal, conjunctival hyperemia) • Renal (CreatX2 or sterile pyuria) • Hepatic (bili or ALTX2) • Hemato (plt <100 000) • CNS (disorientation and alteration in consciousness)
STSS – Dx criteria • CDC 1990: Laboratory criteria • Negative results on the following tests , if obtained: • Serologic test for Rocky Mountain spotted fever, leptospirosis, measles • Blood, throat, CSF cultures - (blood cultures may be + for Staph aureus)
STSS – Dx criteria • CDC 1990: Case classification • Definite case: all 6 criterias • Probable case: 5 on 6 criterias In the absence of clinical markers, strict application is warranted • Excludes subclinical cases • Self-limited
STSS – Dx • Isolation of Staphyloccocus aureus productor of exotoxins in a pt w compatible clinical picture • Not necessary for dx • Help in suspected cases • RARELY isolated in blood
Case cont... • Our patient: • T> 38.9 • Diffuse rash • Hypotension • Multisystem involvement: • Diarrhea, V • Alteration in consciousness • Renal but not sufficient to meet the criteria • Plts 100 000 • Desquamation? Others tests – ? • Probable case
Case cont... • Our patient: • Blood cultures – • Monotest – • Vaginal swab + for staph aureus • Urine culture – • C. Diff – in stools • Specific toxins search at Winnipeg. Results pending.
STSS - Treatment • Treatment of support: • Agressive fluid support w isotonic NS or colloids: ad 10-20 L/24 hres • Vasopressor/inotrope infusion as necessary • Surgical treatment: • Removal of foreign objects: • Tampons • Nasal packing • Surgical debridement of scars: even if wound doesn’t look bad • I & D if abcess
STSS - Treatment Therapy guided at stopping toxin production • Antimicrobial agents: • Have not been shown to affect outcome • IN VITRO: • Clindamycin inhibits protein synthesis – inhibition of TSST-1 • Anti-staph peni, cephalosporin may promote TSST-1 production • No clinical studies
STSS - Treatment Therapy guided at stopping toxin production • Antimicrobial agents: • Recommandation: • Clindamycin 900 IV q8 +/- cloxacillin 2g IV q12 • Clindamycin 900 IV q8 +/- vancomycin 1g IV q12 for MRSA
STSS - Treatment • Additional therapies: • Consider Intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG): • If patients remains unstable • Contains antibodies to TSST-1 • Sporadicaly reported to have salutary effect; controlled trials are incomplete • Corticosteroids: • May accelerate clinical improvement and diminish neuro sequelae • Experimental agents
Case: evolution • Tx: • Cloxacillin + tazocin IV X 2 d • then cloxacillin IV x 4 d • then Keflex PO x 4 d • Hemodynamic stabilisation w 4 L NS and 2 L of Pentaspan the first night • No need for inotropes or additionnal therapies • Progressive improvement of general condition