Clinical and Laboratory Manifestations of Toxic Shock Syndrome

Abstract
We studied 28 women and two men, with a median age of 20 years, who first had toxic shock syndrome between 1 February 1980 and 15 July 1981. Two of these patients died. All patients had intense myalgia, high fever (greater than or equal to 38.9 degrees C), hypotension or syncope, skin rash and desquamation, and abnormalities in at least three organ systems. Over half had sterile pyuria; immature granulocytic leukocytosis; coagulation abnormalities; hypocalcemia; low serum albumin and total protein concentrations; and elevations of blood urea nitrogen, alanine transaminase, bilirubin, and creatine kinase. Staphylococcus aureus was isolated from cultures from sites of soft-tissue infection in both male patients and from 13 of 19 vaginal and eight of 12 cervical cultures. All isolates produced both pyrogenic exotoxin C and enterotoxin F. All patients with a febrile, exanthematous, multisystem illness, particularly one associated with menstruation or a staphylococcal infection, should be promptly evaluated and empirically treated for toxic shock syndrome.

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