How to Diagnose Sepsis
Instructions
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Recognize the general symptoms of sepsis. These include confusion and delirium, shaking chills, decreased urine output, fever, hyperventilation and rapid heart beat.
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Look for more severe symptoms as the sepsis progresses. The blood pressure drops, the patient goes into shock and major organ systems fail. Sepsis has a mortality rate of up to 60 percent in patients with underlying illnesses and also can significantly threaten otherwise healthy people.
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3
Find laboratory results indicative of sepsis. The white blood cell count should be out of the normal range with a low platelet count, blood gases should show acidosis and kidney functioning may be abnormal early in the disease.
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4
Observe additional findings to support a diagnosis of sepsis. A peripheral smear may show the destruction of red blood cells and a blood differential may show immature white blood cells. Fibrin degradation products may be elevated.
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5
Confirm a diagnosis of sepsis by identifying bacteria in a culture grown from a blood smear. This may not be possible if the patient is already on antibiotics.
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