Distinct Hemodynamic Patterns of Septic Shock at Presentation to Pediatric Intensive Care
- 1 October 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 122 (4) , 752-759
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.2007-1979
Abstract
OBJECTIVE. Early aggressive resuscitation is accepted best practice for severe pediatric sepsis. Targeting of therapy to individual hemodynamic patterns is recommended, but assessment of patterns is difficult early in the disease process. New technologies enabling earlier hemodynamic assessment in shock may inform choices for vasoactive drugs in fluid-resistant cases. METHODS. This was a prospective observational study of 30 children with suspected fluid-resistant septic shock (minimum: 40 mL/kg) admitted to the PICU of a tertiary care children's hospital between July 2004 and July 2005. Children were classified according to admission diagnosis (community-acquired sepsis or central venous catheter-associated infection) and assessed within 4 hours after the onset of shock with a noninvasive cardiac output device. Cardiac index and systemic vascular resistance index were measured for all patients. Central venous oxygen saturation was measured for patients with accessible central venous lines at the time of hemodynamic measurements (typically at the superior vena cava-right atrium junction). RESULTS. Fluid-resistant septic shock secondary to central venous catheter-associated infection was typically “warm shock” (15 of 16 patients; 94%), with high cardiac index and low systemic vascular resistance index. In contrast, this pattern was rarely seen in community-acquired sepsis (2 of 14 patients; 14%), where a normal or low cardiac index was predominant. CONCLUSIONS. The hemodynamic patterns of fluid-resistant septic shock by the time children present to the PICU are distinct, depending on cause, with little overlap. If these findings can be reproduced, then targeting the choice of first-line vasoactive infusions in fluid-resistant shock (vasopressors for central venous catheter-associated infections and inotropes for community-acquired sepsis) should be considered.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sepsis since the discovery of Toll-like receptors: Disease concepts and therapeutic opportunitiesCritical Care Medicine, 2007
- ACCURACY OF NON-INVASIVE CARDIAC OUTPUT MONITORING (USCOM).Critical Care Medicine, 2006
- A prospective study of admissions for febrile neutropenia in secondary paediatric units in South East EnglandPediatric Blood & Cancer, 2006
- Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock: Review of the Literature and Emergency Department Management GuidelinesAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 2006
- Emergency physicians can reliably assess emergency department patient cardiac output using the USCOM continuous wave Doppler cardiac output monitorEmergency Medicine Australasia, 2005
- Testing the Reliability of a New Ultrasonic Cardiac Output Monitor, the USCOM, by Using Aortic Flowprobes in Anesthetized DogsAnesthesia & Analgesia, 2005
- Myocardial depressant substances in meningococcal septic shock *Critical Care Medicine, 2002
- Sepsis syndrome and septic shock in pediatrics: Current concepts of terminology, pathophysiology, and managementThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1993
- Negative Inotropic Effects of Cytokines on the Heart Mediated by Nitric OxideScience, 1992
- Assessment of cardiac output by the Doppler ultrasound technique alone.Heart, 1985