Abstract

BackgroundIn critically ill patients with colonization/infection of multidrug-resistant organisms, source control surgery is one of the major determinants of clinical success. In more complex cases, the use of different tools for sepsis management may allow survival until complete source control.Case presentationA 42-year-old white man presented with traumatic hemorrhagic shock. Unstable pelvic fractures led to emergency stabilization surgery. Fever ensued with diarrhea, followed by septic shock. Two weeks later, an abdominal computed tomography scan revealed suprapubic and ischiatic abscesses at surgical sites, as well as dilated bowel. Debridement of both surgical sites, performed with vacuum-assisted closure therapy, yielded isolates of carbapenem and colistin-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. Antibiotic treatment was de-escalated after 21 days; 4 days later fever, leukocytosis, hypotension and acute renal failure relapsed. Blood purification techniques were started, for the removal of endotoxin and inflammatory mediators, with sequential hemodialysis. Clinical improvement ensued; blood cultures yielded Candida albicans and multidrug-resistant Acinetobacter baumannii; panresistant carbapenemase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae grew from wound swabs. In spite of shock reversal, our patient remained febrile, with diarrhea. Control blood cultures yielded Candida albicans, Acinetobacter baumannii and carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. His abdominal pain increased, paralleled by a right flank palpable mass. Colonoscopy revealed patchy serpiginous ulcers. At exploratory laparotomy, an inflammatory post-traumatic pseudotumor of his right colon was removed. Blood cultures turned negative after surgery. Septic shock, however, relapsed 4 days later. A blood purification cycle was repeated and combination antimicrobial therapy continued. Surgical wounds and blood cultures were persistently positive for carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae. Removal of pelvic synthesis media was therefore anticipated. Three weeks later, clinical, microbiological, and biochemical evidence of infection resolved.ConclusionsHigh quality intensive assistance for sepsis episodes needs a clear plan of cure, aimed to complete infection source control, in a complex multidisciplinary interplay of specialists and intensive care physicians.

Highlights

  • In critically ill patients with colonization/infection of multidrug-resistant organisms, source control surgery is one of the major determinants of clinical success

  • High quality intensive assistance for sepsis episodes needs a clear plan of cure, aimed to complete infection source control, in a complex multidisciplinary interplay of specialists and intensive care physicians

  • Sepsis is often complicated in its course in such patients, mainly because of the persistence of predisposing factors and multidrug-resistant (MDR) bacteria involvement, in particular carbapenem-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae (CRKP) and other difficult-totreat Gram-negative microorganisms [3,4,5]

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Summary

Background

Sepsis is a well-recognized factor contributing to poor outcome after severe traumatic injury [1]. Blood cultures were negative; urine and tracheal aspirate samples were positive for CRKP and MDR A. baumannii He had a short-lasting improvement, with fever, abdominal pain, and vomiting relapsing after a few days; a repeated CT scan of his abdomen revealed suprapubic and left ischiatic abscesses at surgical sites, as well as dilated bowel due to paralytic ileus. 4 days later, he had fever and severe leukocytosis; he relapsed with acute renal failure: creatinine 2.53 mg/dL and acute kidney injury (AKI) stage 2 according to the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes classification (KDIGO) [17] His PCT levels rose above 100 ng/ml, his lactate was 3.3 mmol/L, and his SOFA score was 10. Surgical wounds and blood cultures: KPC-producing K. pneumoniae panres and A. baumannii

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