Abstract

Sepsis is a leading cause of death in the United States, with a mortality rate in excess of 215,000 deaths per year. It may lead to septic shock, a complex pathophysiological process with microbial and host response events that progress to multisystem derangement. There is poor documentation of the relationship between dental infection and septic shock, with only a few case reports of septic shock secondary to dentoalveolar abscess. Presented is a case of sepsis/septic shock in a 23-year-old man with signs and symptoms of pulpal necrosis, acute apical abscess, and canine space infection that rapidly progressed to an altered mental state, hyperthermia, tachycardia, hypotension, acute respiratory failure, diarrhea, renal insufficiency, lactic acidosis, leukocytosis, and hyperglycemia. Once septic shock develops, the mortality rate is nearly 50%. Early antimicrobial intervention is associated with surviving severe sepsis, making it critical for dentists to understand local factors leading to the crisis and the signs and symptoms of the sepsis–septic shock continuum.

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