This is the first in a new series of “”Bedside Tutorials in Critical Care” that reflects issues that we dynamically come across while doing rounds in the ICU.
Vasopressors are very widely used drugs in critical illness – norepinephrine (noradrenaline) is the most widely prescribed catecholamine, used in most types of shock and considered the standard of care vasopressor in septic shock. Epinephrine, these days may be added as an inotrope or used in neurogenic or anaphylactic shock. Vasopressin is used to restore vascular tone as a form of hormone replacement therapy.
Norepinephrine and Epinephrine concentration and dosing is extremely confusing. Many ICUs dose these agents in micrograms (mcg) per minute. This translates to ml/hour – often the bedside practitioner has not made the conversion. Consequently, when asked “how much norepinephrine the patient is on?” the response may be 5 or 10ml per hour. This is unsatisfactory, as, based on weight, there may be a tremendous variability in the dose received. Moreover the concentration of norepinephrine varies widely. In our hospital we have been required to use a pre-diluted formula of 4mg in 50ml (delivered by syringe driver) resulting in a concentration of 80mcg/ml. Conversely, epinephrine needs to be drawn up, using 1mg ampoules, usually 3mg in 50ml or 60mcg/ml (conveniently this works out as 1mcg/min/ml. Peripherally infused norepinephrine is constructed by placing 4mg in 250ml, leading to a concentration of 16mcg/ml.
Alternatively, norepinephrine may be diluted 16mg in 250ml to yield 64mic/ml. When a patient is transferred from another hospital or another country, it may be really difficult to translate the dilution and concentration used there to match up dosage. And that is important – escalating doses of pressors are suggestive of failure of source control, but 10ml/hour is twice to dose delivered to a 50kg person than a 100kg person. And at what dose do you start vasopressin?
Consequently, I strongly recommend that you use mcg/kg/minute as your dosing strategy for both norepinephrine and epinephrine. The starting dose is 0.01-0.03mcg/kg/min and it is titrated upwards to achieve a mean arterial pressure of 65mmHg. Once the dose has exceeded 0.25mic/kg/min, the patient should receive vaspressin 0.03 international units per minute. If 40iu is diluted in 50ml, to deliver 0.03 iu/min, the infusion should run at 2.3ml/hour.
This tutorial looks at the diagnosis and management of the patient with septic shock. See below for a transcript of this major tutorial.
SEPSIS AND SEPTIC SHOCK
Introduction
Sepsis is defined as life threatening organ dysfunction due to a dysregulated host response to infection. In other words, normally, once we are infected with bacterial, fungi or viruses, our immune system activates, mops up the pathogens, clears away debris and returns to normal afterwards. That does not occur in systemic sepsis – either due to an overwhelming infection (e.g. bowel perforation) or an anomaly within the immune system: there is an initial massive release of inflammatory and cytotoxic material (sometimes called a “cytokine storm”) and then immunoparalysis, due to loss of inflammatory reserve. The patient is a “sitting duck” for further infection.
Septic Shock is defined as a subset of sepsis in which particularly profound circulatory, cellular, and metabolic abnormalities substantially increase mortality. There are anomalies of the cardiovascular system, neurohormonal system and autonomic nervous system. At the bedside, the clinical presentation is of acute organ dysfunction, the most common of which are hypotension, tachypnea and confusion. The most basic definition of septic shock is that it is an infected state characterized by persistent hypotension despite adequate fluid resuscitation and lactate levels ≥ 2 mmol/L. It requires the need for vasopressor therapy to maintain a mean arterial pressure (MAP) ≥ 65 mmHg.
Septic shock is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide, especially in intensive care units. Understanding the pathogenesis of septic shock is critical to improving therapeutic interventions and outcomes.
PATHOGENESIS OF SEPSIS AND SEPTIC SHOCK
The pathogenesis of septic shock involves a series of immune, inflammatory, and metabolic responses. This intricate cascade is initiated by infection, typically from a bacterial pathogen, but can also be caused by fungi, viruses, or parasites. The resultant immune response goes haywire, leading to dysregulation of the inflammatory process, endothelial dysfunction, microcirculatory failure, metabolic derangements, and organ failure.
Initial Infection and Immune Response
Sepsis starts with the encroachment of a pathogen (usually bacteria) into the bloodstream or tissues. The immune system detects these pathogens via pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) such as toll-like receptors (TLRs) and nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain (NOD)-like receptors (NLRs) present on immune cells like macrophages, dendritic cells, and neutrophils. These receptors recognize pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs) and damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), which trigger an innate immune response.
Once the infection is recognized, a cascade of signaling events is initiated, leading to the production of proinflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interleukins (IL-1, IL-6, IL-8), and interferons. This cytokine storm is crucial for recruiting immune cells to the site of infection, increasing vascular permeability, and amplifying the immune response. This happens in all situations when infection occurs and it is self limiting.
However, in septic shock, the initial immune activation becomes dysregulated. Massive release of proinflammatory mediators overwhelms the body’s control mechanisms, causing a systemic inflammatory response (SIRS) that causes intense collateral damage to tissues distant to the site of infection. There is widespread activation of and damage to endothelial cells, resulting in glycocalyx disruption and capillary leak, the coagulation system, resulting in microvascular coagulation, and the complement cascade, resulting in tissue damage.
Once of the major issues to understand in early sepsis is that due to dysregulation, much of the body’s inflammatory reserve and homeostatic mechanisms are used up early. Consequently, it may take some time to restore innate immunity (immunoparalysis), making the patient vulnerable to secondary infections, and neurohormonal reserve – particularly vasopressin and, later, cortisol.
Impact of Sepsis on the Endothelium and Microcirculation
Endothelial cells lining the blood vessels play a central role in maintaining vascular integrity, regulating blood flow, and controlling inflammation. In septic shock, the release of proinflammatory cytokines and mediators causes endothelial activation and dysfunction. This results in:
Increased vascular permeability: capillaries become leaky and protein rich fluid extravascates into the interstitium, expanding and damaging its gelatinous structure (“fracking the interstitium”). This results in reduced circulating volume, tissue edema and organ dysfunction. such as nitric oxide (NO), prostacyclin, and other vasoactive substances.
Vasoplegia – Pathological vasodilatation across the arteriolar and venular network is a characteristic component of septic shock. The causes are multifactorial, but include increased production of vasodilators like nitric oxide, bradykinin, and prostacyclin. This is manifest by low blood pressure, caused by increased unstressed blood volume, reduced venous return, reduced stroke volume and reduced arterial resistance.
Microcirculatory dysfunction: the microcirculation is characteristically disrupted in sepsis. This is characterized by clot deposition in small vessels, platelet aggregation, disruption of the glycocalyx and endothelial swelling. Blood flow is reduced, and this leads to tissue hypoxia and organ dysfunction, particularly in the lungs, kidneys, liver, bowel and heart.
Coagulopathy: Septic shock is associated with coagulopathy likely due to activation of the coagulation cascades following endothelial disruption, resulting in widespread microthrombosis. The platelet count falls dramatically, and then, due to loss of coagulation reserve, bleeding results.
Metabolic Changes in Sepsis (including Lactate)
Although I don’t cover metabolic changes in the video tutorial – it is worth looking at them to develop a holistic understanding of sepsis/multi-organ dysfunction.
There is insulin resistance – resulting in hyperglycemia, and subsequent relative hypoinsulinemia. Increased blood glucose provides fuel for pathogens and exacerbates immune dysfunction.
Mitochondrial function and oxygen utilization become dysfunctional. The impact of this on outcomes is poorly understood, but it may be part of the motor behind multi-organ failure, particularly in the kidneys.
Principle utilization of skeletal and visceral proteins as sources of energy, principally by gluconeogesesis. The body is unable to use fat stores as a source of energy, and “autocannibalism” results. This may be a significant component of “polymyopathy” of critical illness.
Aerobic Glycolysis – although the body produces approximately 1.5 mol of Lactate per day, this is usually rapidly cleared by the Liver (Cori cycle) such that plasma lactate is unmeasurable. I acute critical illness including sepsis, lactate conversion to pyruvate is reduced and lactate production increased due activation of lactate dehydrogenase by epinephrine (adrenaline). Reduced or dysfunctional hepatic blood flow results in reduced lactate metabolism. The consequence is hyperlactatemia and metabolic acidosis. The degree of acidosis strongly correlates with the severity of acute critical illness. A plasma lactate in excess of 2mmol/L is considered clinically relevant.
Organ Dysfunction and Failure (MODS – Multi-Organ Dysfunction Syndrome)
It is imperative that clinicians quantify the degree of organ failure in acute critical illness at an early stage. A useful tool for monitoring MODS is the SOFA score.
The most easily quantified systems for identifying MODS are the respiratory system, the cardiovascular system, the central nervous system, the kidneys, coagulation and the liver.
Respiratory – hypoxic respiratory failure that may progress to Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
Cardiovascular – hypotension, hypoperfusion
CNS – confusion, delirium
Kidneys – oliguria, acute kidney injury
GI/Liver – Ileus, hyper or hypolglycemia, hyperbilirubinemia
Blood – coagulopathy, thrombocytopenia
The mechanisms behind each of these injuries are beyond the remit of this article. One should calculate the SOFA score on each critically ill patient each day.
SCREENING THE PATIENT FOR SEPSIS
Every hospital has its own screening tool for sepsis, and, despite 30 years of proposals, there is no universally accepted tool. Below is a summary of the options currently available.
Quick SOFA (qSOFA) Score (2016)
The qSOFA score is based on three clinical criteria:
Respiratory rate ≥ 22 breaths per minute
Altered mentation (Glasgow Coma Scale < 15)
Systolic blood pressure ≤ 100 mmHg
A qSOFA score of 2 or more points indicates a high risk of sepsis and warrants immediate further evaluation and intervention.
Although the qSOFA score is a useful rule of thumb, it is neither sensitive nor specific and not recommended as a standalone screening tool by the Surviving Sepsis Campaign.
Respiratory rate: >20 breaths per minute or PaCO2 < 32 mmHg
White blood cell count: >12,000/mm³, <4,000/mm³, or >10% immature bands
Patients who meet 2 or more criteria are considered to have SIRS, and if the cause is infection, it may progress to sepsis.
Early Warning Scores
Most hospitals use Early Warning Scores (EWS) to identify the deteriorating patient on the ward, but these are now commonly combined with SIRS and other criteria for identifying sepsis. EWS looks at common bedside observations and categorizes the variation from normal. These include heart rate, respiratory rate, need for oxygen, blood pressure, level of awakeness (AVPU) and temperature. The more systems that are abnormal the higher the score and the more likely that an intervention (e.g. consulting the critical care team) will take place. I am a big fan of EWS.
If medical review determines that the patient indeed is likely to have sepsis, a “bundle” of care (such as “sepsis-6”) is activated and the patient follows a sepsis pathway. Although such pathways are used worldwide, I am going to follow a slightly different 10 point therapeutic route that mirrors the Surviving Sepsis Guidelines and is more applicable to critical care.
MANAGING THE PATIENT WITH SEPTIC SHOCK
Step 1 Put in an IV line
TAKE BLOOD IMMEDIATELY FOR:
1. Blood Cultures
2. CRP or Procalcitonin/ FBC (WCC) / Lactate
This will give us an idea of the level of inflammation (WCC, CRP and Lactate) over the next hour or two and, hopefully will help us guide antibiotic therapy
Step 2 Through that IV line
ADMINISTER
Broad Spectrum Antibiotics (e.g. co-amoxyclav) based on your best guess source.
Upto 30ml/kg of intravenous fluid, preferably a balanced solution such as Hartmann’s, Lactated Ringers, or Plasmalyte-148.
Step 3 Vasopressors
If the MAP (or adjusted MAP target) does not reach 65mmHg after fluid resuscitation (do NOT give more than 5L of iv fluid) then the patient requires VASOPRESSORS.
The vasopressor of choice is norepinephrine (noradrenaline -NAD). This is an extremely effective agent: it restores the stressed blood volume, increases diastolic blood pressure – improving coronary blood flow, has inotropic effects – thus maintains stroke volume, and preferentially perfuses the midline structures, rather than the extremities. The major benefit of norepinephrine versus epinephrine in this setting is NAD’s lack of B2 adrenoceptor effect – it does not raise blood glucose or lactate.
Norepinephrine should be administered relatively early, and it does not require a central line: NAD can be safely delivered by a proximal peripheral cannula.
Step 4: Hormone Replacement Therapy
If the dose of norepinephrine is rising (the exact level is unclear – I turn to this drug early) then an ultra low dose infusion of arginine vasopressin is indicated. Vasopressin works via V1 receptors to increase vascular tone, and V2 receptors to maintain vascular volume. The dose is typically 0.03 units per minute – this will have no physiological impact on normal patients – in the setting of sepsis or severe blood loss vasopressin (as hormone replacement therapy) restores vascular tone, improves the effectiveness of norepinephrine and improves renal blood flow and urinary output. There is no downside, and I typically wean norepinephrine off before stopping vasopressin.
If High Dose Vasopressors are Not Working – consider Corticosteroids
Corticosteroids in this setting may have 2 benefits: 1. Damping down the initial hyperinflammatory response (some evidence in community acquired pneumonia), 2. As hormone replacement therapy (glucocorticoids are co-factors for catecholamine function).
Step 5 Identify and Control the Source of the Infection
The source is either medical or surgical. Medical sources are commonly – urinary tract, respiratory, intracranial (meningitis) or catheter related bloodstream infections.
As part of the workup, various cultures should be sent: blood culture, sputum culture, urine culture. A chest x-ray should be performed and tailored imaging to confirm the suspected source of the problem (CT abdomen, pelvis, chest, spine, brain)
Surgical sources are medley – they range from necrotizing soft tissue infections, to retained products of conception, perforated bowel or viscus, pilonidal abscess, intra-abdominal abscess, pancreatitis, spinal abscess, wound infection or wound dehiscence. Your cannot medically manage a surgical problem.
Step 6 Be Careful of the Search Satisficing Error
If the patient is persistently hypotensive despite multiple high dose pressors you need to expand your search for the problem. Is this cardiogenic shock (consider and echocardiogram) or a missed head or spinal injury (neurogenic shock or raised ICP). Does the patient have abdominal compartment syndrome (hypotension, oliguria, high airway pressures and intra-abdominal pressure of >20mmHg) or another compartment syndrome – cardiac tamponade, too much PEEP, tension pneumothorax etc.
If the lactate does not fall, you have a continued problem: there is still splanchnic hypoperfusion (the patient is under-resuscitated), the bowel or splanchnic circulation are ischemic, or the source is not controlled. Be careful of overvaluing hyperlactatemia in patients on epinephrine (adrenaline) infusions – this directly drives up lactate levels.
If there is severe mottling – there is no flow to the microcirculation – and that is what you can see on the skin – you cannot see the lungs, bowel and liver which are also suffering. Two things should be considered – is norepinephrine doing more harm than good (lower your MAP target and reduce the NAD) and is the patient still under-resuscitated. In this setting it is reasonable to “empty the kitchen sink” into the patient – giving plasma, 20% albumin and even 8.4% NaHCO3 to expand the plasma volume and restore blood flow.
Step 7 Prevent Further Complications
Once the patient is in the ICU and relatively stable you need to back off on therapeutic interventions, and take measures to prevent iatrogenic complications. These include:
Stopping further crystalloid resuscitation – NO maintenance fluids – to avoid both fluid and solute overload.
Wake the patient up and avoid over sedation, give the patient a day-night cycle and proper sleep hygiene to ensure that they don’t develop deliriu,
Avoid intubation if at all possible, if not – carefully watch the tidal volumes and airway pressures to avoid ventilator induced lung injury.
Sit the patient up and sterilize the mouth to avoid ventilator associated pneumonia.
Remove central lines when no longer needed.
Give stress ulcer prophylaxis (if indicated).
Watch carefully for bed sores – turn and mobilize the patient.
Address nutrition, bowel hygiene and the microbiome at an early stage.
Step 8 Deresuscitate and Normalize the Patient
After 7 days one should be aiming to return the patient to their baseline weight – and that means deresuscitating the crystalloids from the patients body, either spontaneously, using diuretics or using continuous kidney replacement therapy (CKRT). The fluid balance should be even by day 7. In addition, nutrition should be started by day 3 and the patient should be receiving full nutrition by day 7. Sedation and other “consciousness clouding” drugs should be discontinued. Antibiotics should be de-escalated and stopped.
Step 9: Start Rehab Early
The multidisciplinary team are an essential component of modern critical care – a patient lying sedated in a bed, endlessly, develops medley complications. Sleep hygiene is imperative. Early mobilization and assessment by physiotherapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy etc. is essential. The microbiology team should assess the need for antimicrobials on a daily basis and care taken to avoid hospital acquired infections. Finally, critical illness takes a massive psychological toll – intensive care units should have a staff psychologist to deal with the patients mental health needs, to prevent PTSD.
Step 10: If the Patient is Not Getting Better They Are Getting Worse
If the patient does not recover rapidly within 7 days then they are likely to enter phase of chronic critical illness, where the body’s vital systems seem to go into a state of hibernation. Often they develop severe muscle weakness, resulting in difficulty liberating from mechanical ventilation (a tracheostomy may be required), the autonomic nervous system may become dysfunctional – manifest by rapid swings in blood pressure and heart rate, the neuroendocrine system may be burnt out and the patient may develop immunoparalysis.
There is no magic bullet to restart the body in chronic critical illness. The majority of patients will eventually recover. Unfortunately, many don’t – multiple infectious and iatrogenic hits results in progressive multi-organ failure and ultimately death. Although in hospital sepsis outcomes have improved dramatically since the turn of the century, little progress has been made on chronic critical illness; unfortunately.
Hypovolemic shock is one of the major problems we encounter in acute critical illness. This tutorial explains the mechanisms by which the body compensates for hemorrhage/hypovolemia, why the blood pressure and hemoglobin saturation are unhelpful and what tools may be useful at the bedside to assess the patient.
I also briefly discuss resuscitation of the bleeding patient and compartment syndromes.
This tutorial looks at the problems of Hypotension and Shock. I define the difference between the concepts – not all hypotensive patients are shocked and not all shocked patients are hypotensive. I then go through a system for exploring the hypotensive or shocked patients’ status to determine the underlying problem – illustrated by a series of clinical scenarios.
One of the most common physiologic and pathologic abnormalities that we get called for is dysfunctional blood pressure: hypotension and hypertension. This tutorial looks at the question – “What is Blood Pressure” the components and its regulation. I then go on to discuss arterial pressure monitoring, invasive (via arterial lines) and non invasive (using oscillometers) and the strengths and weaknesses of both.
This tutorial looks at the pulse, what it is, the waveform and how that reflects systole and diastole. I then go on to look at the pulse waveform on pulse oximeters and the pulsatility index. Finally, I discuss the essential topic of Pulse Pressure Variability.
This is the first tutorial in the cardiovascular assessment module. In the tutorial I discuss heart rate, how it originates and how it is controlled. This is principally a discussion about sinus bradycardia and sinus tachycardia. I go on to discuss the parasympathetic nervous system and the sympathetic nervous system, how they function physiologically and how they are impacted by drugs that we administer and disease processes. I provide a detailed discussion of adrenoceptor agonists and antagonists.
I feel like I have been working on this tutorial for several years. I actually have. When one encounters a modern chest drain unit in ICU for the first time or the 50th time it can be quite daunting. How much is draining? Is it oscillating? What does “bubbling” imply? When do you use suction? Why do some nurses leave a meniscus of fluid in the tubing but others don’t? What is the little red cap supposed to do?
This tutorial starts with a discussion of the physiology of pneumothorax and hemothorax, and then progressively visits one bottle, two bottle and three bottle systems. I then go on to explain how relatively modern chest drainage systems work, and how they need to be modified to apply suction – wet and dry. Finally I explain how very modern digital chest drainage systems work.
If you have struggled with understanding chest drains, I guarantee you’ll learn something.
This is the final tutorial on the basics of Chest Imaging in the ICU. It includes a discussion about the extrapulmonary tissues – pleural and mediastinal and lung diseases (pneumonia, ARDS, PJP etc.).
One of the reasons that we perform portable AP chest x-rays (CXR) in the ICU is to confirm the correct positioning of hardware: endotracheal tubes, central lines, feeding tubes, pulmonary artery catheters, pacemaker wires and chest tubes. This tutorial discusses the correct position of each of these devices and looks at malplacement and complications.
The ideal location of the tip of the endotracheal tube is 3 to 5cm above the carina, below the clavicles and at the level of the T4 spinous process. If tube is too far in, there is a risk of endobronchial intubation and atelectasis of an entire lung (usually the left lung, but not infrequently the right upper lobe also).
The ideal location of a central line, placed in the SVC distribution (internal jugular, subclavian or PICC) is at the junction of the Superior Vena Cava and the Right Atrium. Although inadvertent arterial puncture is less likely, these days, due to ultrasound guided insertion, the tip of a central line can end up can end up in all kinds of places. The tip placement, for prolonged infusions in critical care (for example – pressors or TPN), needs to be confirmed by chest x ray. The major complication of central lines is pneumothorax due to inadvertent pleural puncture during placement.
The pulmonary artery catheter is floated through the right heart and lodged into a peripheral branch of the pulmonary artery, aided by a balloon. The ideal location of the tip is in the lower zone of the lung, and the appearance of the catheter may be a V – the tip is in the left pulmonary artery or a B – the tip is in the right pulmonary artery. It should not be curled up in the RV or, worse, in the inferior vena cava.
Intra-aortic balloon pumps are inserted in cardiology, to manage cardiogenic shock, and following cardiac surgery. The balloon inflates in diastole to increase diastolic pressure, increasing coronary artery perfusion pressure and improving cardiac performance. The tip of the IABP should be distal to the left subclavian artery as it comes off the thoracic aorta. If the tip is too proximal, there is a risk of ischemia to the left arm, if it is not high enough, then it doesn’t function as required and may injure the kidneys.
Chest drains are typically placed to drain air and fluid from the pleural cavity. The tip of the chest tube needs to be where the “stuff” that you wish to drain is located: in the lung apices for air (if the patient is erect or semi erect), in the bases for fluid. There are two “eyes” on each chest tube – both need to be located inside the pleura or air will leak into the subcutaneous tissues.
Finally you need to be able to identify single lead and dual lead pacemakers, implantable defibrillators (ICD) and loop recorders on chest x-ray.