Conference Coverage

VIDEO: It's time to focus on less severe sepsis


 

AT ATS 2014

SAN DIEGO – About half of sepsis-related deaths are in people with normal blood pressure and normal or intermediate serum lactate levels (less than 4 mmol/L) on admission, suggesting that perhaps in some cases, sepsis that could have been extinguished early got out of hand before it was recognized, according to a review of about 7 million adult hospital admissions by Kaiser Permanente researchers.

In other words, even though death rates have come down for patients with severe sepsis, there’s still a ways to go to recognize and treat less severe cases in time. Lead investigator Dr. Vincent Liu of the Kaiser Permanente division of research, Oakland, Calif., explained the problem – and what Kaiser’s doing about it – at an international conference of the American Thoracic Society.

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aotto@frontlinemedcom.com

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