Friday, September 25, 2020

Sepsis

 What is Sepsis?

Sepsis is a rare but extremely fatal condition. It is your bodies' most extreme reaction to a bacterial infection. Sepsis usually starts mildly when an infection isn't treated properly or a few infections happen at once. As it is ignores, the case worsens, blood flow weakens and blood clots form, it can cause multiple organ failure and tissue death. Without treatment in time, it can worsen in no time and kill quickly. Even though most people recover from mild sepsis after being treated, if sepsis isn't treated, it will kill within 36 hours. The average mortality rate for sepsis is 40% and causes 270000 deaths per year, which is an even bigger killer than opiods, breast cancer and prostate cancer combined. Even if you survive a severe sepsis episode, you may be more vulnerable to future infections.


How do you catch Sepsis?

Sepsis happens when you don't treat your bacterial infection properly and it enters your bloodstream. After it enters your bloodstream, white blood cells and bacteria fight all around the body because the blood carries it to different organs, causing clots and leaky blood vessels. This causes inflammation all around the body and organs, which can cause tissue death and organ failure. The most common causes are from lung infections and urine tract infections.


Stages:

- Mild Sepsis: still recoverable, but has to be treat in time

- Severe Sepsis: organ damage, tissue dysfunction

- Septic Shock: organ damage and failure, tissue death (gangrene), hypotension


Symptoms:

Shivering, chills (above 38 degrees celcius or below 36 degrees celcius)

Extreme pain/discomfort (abnormal organ functions)

Pale

Sleepy, confused, disoriented

I feel like death

Short of breath

- No urination

- Rapid Pulse

- Low blood pressure and oxygen


Prevention:

Remember to treat your infections properly, and if you feel more than 2 warning signs of sepsis, go to a doctor immediately or call EMS. The earlier you get help, the faster and better you'll recover.


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