Author:
Chen Yingjie,Liao Yanling,Chen Xiaoying,Fan Hanliang,Lin Daoyi,Zheng Ting,Chen Xiaohui,Gong Cansheng,Gao Fei,Jiang Jundan,Zheng Xiaochun
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients with hemorrhagic shock may develop emerging enterogenic sepsis due to damage to the intestinal mucosal barrier and translocation of intestinal bacteria and endotoxins caused by ischemic injury. Because of the dual effects of anesthesia state and hemorrhagic shock, perioperative emerging enterogenic sepsis is even more rare and insidious.
Case presentation
We reported a case of 56-year-old man who underwent right hepatectomy for intrahepatic bile duct stones. Severe hemorrhage occurred during the procedure and the hemodynamics neither improved nor worsened after rehydration therapy and vasoactive drug administration. Based on the patient’s history and clinical presentation, a possible enterogenic sepsis was considered. After anti-infective treatment and hormone supplementation, the patient’s circulation improved significantly and he had an uneventful recovery.
Conclusion
The possibility of emerging enterogenic sepsis in hemorrhagic shock must always be taken into consideration. Familiarity with the risk factors and pathophysiological alterations of enterogenic sepsis is a prerequisite for early recognition and sound clinical decision making.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
2 articles.
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