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    • Life-threatening organ dysfunction

      • Sepsis is defined as life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by a dysregulated host response to infection (1). It may occur with infection anywhere in the body, and may be secondary to bacterial, fungal, or viral agents.
      www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov › pmc › articles
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  2. Mar 3, 2020 · Sepsis is common in both human and veterinary emergency and critical care settings and has high mortality rates (40% to 70%). 1,2 Patients affected by SIRS and sepsis are at risk for developing multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and/or septic shock (Box 1).

  3. Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome and Sepsis, Part 1: Recognition and Diagnosis | Today's Veterinary Practice. Peer Reviewed. Emergency Medicine/Critical Care. Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome and Sepsis, Part 1: Recognition and Diagnosis.

  4. Feb 1, 2008 · Treatment. The most important aspect of treating sepsis in dogs centers on the identification and eradication of the inciting cause (see "Products for management of canine parvoviral enteritis or bacterial infection" below). An effort should be made to identify the causative microorganism through cytologic examination and culture.

  5. Feb 13, 2024 · Sepsis is a life-threatening condition associated with the body's response to an infection. In human medicine, sepsis has been defined by consensus on 3 occasions, most recently in 2016. In veterinary medicine, there is little uniformity in how sepsis is defined and no consensus on how to identify it clinically.

  6. Introduction . Sepsis and septic shock are major causes for morbidity and mortality in patients in both human and veterinary medicine. In people, the true incidence of sepsis is unknown since there is variability in the reported cases.

  7. In veterinary medicine, sepsis is defined as a systemic inflammatory response to an infectious etiology.

  8. Sepsis is currently defined as the systemic inflammatory response to infection. Therefore systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) is a complicated syndrome that may occur as a result of infection, but also from trauma, burning lesions, frozen stroke and so many other aggressions.

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