The autopsy pathology of sepsis-related death |
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Authors: | Sebastian Lucas |
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Affiliation: | aDepartment of Histopathology, KCL School of Medicine, St. Thomas’ Hospital, London SE1 7EH, UK |
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Abstract: | There is a clinico-pathological continuum of infection-driven sepsis syndromes, the most severe being septic shock with multi-organ failure. The organ dysfunctions are due to inflammatory cytokines from remote sources (the site of infection) and constitute the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS). The common causes are Gram-positive and Gram-negative infections; the common infection sites are (in descending frequency) lung, blood stream, intra-abdominal disease, urological sepsis and surgical wounds; the commonest organ dysfunctions are systemic shock, kidney, lung, and heart. The differential diagnosis of severe sepsis includes disseminated malignancy, atherosclerosis, and haemophagocytic syndrome. New treatments for severe sepsis are being trialled to raise the poor survival rates in intensive care. The role of the autopsy is to describe carefully the organ lesions, provide microbiological evidence of infection, and to correlate these with the clinical features and therapeutic variables. |
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Keywords: | Sepsis Shock Autopsy Apoptosis Cirrhosis Haemophagocytosis Acute lung injury Microbiological diagnosis Disseminated intravascular coagulation |
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