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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
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INFECTION AND SEPSIS • Surrounded by pathogens • Infection is the exception • Protective from infection • Physical barriers • Chemical barriers • Immunological function
Physical and ChemicalBarriers to Infection • Skin • stronger in hands and feet • sebaceous secretions lower pH • Mucous membranes • ciliary function • mucous barrier • acid mileu in stomach
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
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 • pain,redness,swelling, warmth loss of function • Systemic signs • Fever, somnolence, confusion, ileus, hypotension • Lab tests • 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
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 • sharp in character, well localised at first • spreads to surrounding areas • involuntary guarding, rigidity • absent bowel sounds • Posture • lying still, rapid breathing ,no movement • General condition • ill, septic, dehydrated, hypotension
Intraabdominal Infection • Usually viscus perforation • colon worse than upper GIT • Isolates • aerobic - E. Coli, klebsiella other enterobacter, strep, enterococci, proteus, pseudomonas • anaerobic - bacteroides, Clostridium • Treatment is surgical and aggressive antibiotic treatment
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?