Author:
Sarmin Monira,Begum Monjory,Islam Farhana,Afroze Farzana,Shahrin Lubaba,zaman Sharifuz,Alam Tahmina,Bin Shahid Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayeem,Ahmed Tahmeed,Chisti Mohammod Jobayer
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundClinical features of sepsis and severe diarrhea often overlap and create a dilemma among the clinicians. To describe factors associated with severe sepsis in diarrheal adults and their outcomes to understand their interplay as clinical features of sepsis and severe diarrhea often overlap.Methods and resultsWe used this retrospective chart analysis employing a case-control design to study critically ill diarrheal adults aged ≥ 18 years treated in ICU Dhaka hospital, icddr,b between January 2011 to December 2015. Diarrheal adults with a diagnosis of severe sepsis were cases and an equal number of randomly selected non-septic patients were the controls. Of 8,863 in-patient adults, 350 fulfilled the criteria of cases. Cases died significantly more (9% vs 3%, p=0.002) than controls. 69% of the cases progressed to septic shock. In logistic regression analysis, steroid intake, ileus, acute kidney injury, metabolic acidosis, and hypocalcemia were significantly associated with severe sepsis in diarrheal adults (all, p<0.05). 12% of cases (40/335) had bacteremia. Streptococcus pneumoniae [9 (22.5%)] was the single most common pathogen and gram-negatives [27 (67.5%)] were prevailing as a group.ConclusionDiarrheal adults who had ileus, AKI, metabolic acidosis, hypocalcemia, and also took steroids were prone to have severe sepsis. Strikingly, gram-negatives were the predominant bacteria among the diarrheal adults having severe sepsis.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
3 articles.
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