Each day thousands of children across the world die as a result of infection. Sepsis, severe sepsis and septic shock represent a continuum of increasing severity for which present definitions are not wholly satisfactory (Levy et al. 2003; Brilli and Goldstein 2005). The term sepsis refers to the presence of an infection caused by a microbe that invades tissue, fluid or a body cavity that is normally sterile, plus the presence of clinical and/or laboratory evidence of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS, temperature or leucocyte abnormalities and abnormal vital signs) (Goldstein et al. 2005). When sepsis is complicated by multi-organ failure, it is regarded as severe, while septic shock is diagnosed when sepsis coexists with a state of acute circulatory failure (Levy et al. 2003).
CITATION STYLE
Argent, A. C., & Kissoon, N. T. (2015). Mechanical ventilation in infection, sepsis and organ failure. In Pediatric and Neonatal Mechanical Ventilation: From Basics to Clinical Practice (pp. 1369–1384). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-01219-8_54
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