Lactic Acid has a WIDE Differential Diagnosis (not just Sepsis)

There's a pendulum in medicine. Some things are over recognized and aggressively treated, some things are under appreciated (like subtle decreases in serum bicarb showing that the patient is becoming more acidotic and no one notices because the patient has obesity hypoventilation syndrome and their baseline bicarb is 34 and now has a bicarb of …

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Lactic Acid is an Alarm, not a Treatment in Sepsis and Septic Shock

I need to eat my words on this one, because now there's data to show that there's a benefit to rechecking lactate levels in septic patients, but not for the reasons why one would think. During my rounds over the course of the weekend, I recall telling several nurses that there's no data to suggest …

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thiamine renal failure

Thiamine and Renal Failure in Septic Shock Patients

Every possible option to decreased morbidity, mortality, and costs are worth looking at in my book. The study that I am reviewing at this moment was published in 2017. I am ashamed that I had not run into it until today (10/19/19). It's challenging to stay up to date in everything. I digress. It is …

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The gut microbiome alters immunophenotype and survival from sepsis

I've had very similar patients with very similar infections where one was out of the ICU in a short amount of time and the other died in flames. Many variables in play, of course, but you get my point. Could the gut microbiome hold a key regarding which patients do well and which patients don't …

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