Biomarkers for the Early Identification of Sepsis in the Emergency Department
SepsisMonocentric prospective study on consecutive patients attending the emergency department and suspected to have sepsis. Blood sampling for the measurement of a panel of biomarkers of interest in sepsis.
Release of Nociceptin From Granulocytes in Sepsis
SepsisSeptic Shock2 moreNociceptin is a protein found in the body, with a number of functions in the central nervous system, blood vessels and the gut. There is evidence that it may have a role in controlling the immune response to infection, and may act as a link between the brain and immune system. In infection, or after surgery, there is an increase in nociceptin, and subjects greater elevations of nociceptin have a poorer outcome. There is evidence that cells of the immune system may produce nociceptin, although it is not yet known which cells are capable of producing it, and what "switches on" production. This study aims to determine Which cells of the immune system can produce nociceptin If there is a difference in the ability to produce nociceptin between healthy volunteers and patients with severe infections
Evaluation of CPD MNV as an Aid in the Diagnosis and Risk Assessment of Sepsis (Protocol # Sepsis...
SepsisSevere Sepsis and Septic ShockThe investigators hypothesize that CPD parameters will provide improved prediction of sepsis compared to currently employed laboratory parameters. These studies hold the potential to shape practitioner guidelines and improve the timeliness and accuracy with which patients with sepsis are treated today.
Evaluation of CDSS in Detection of SIRS and Sepsis in Pediatric Patients
SIRSSepsis1 moreThis trial aims to evaluate the accuracy of a Clinical Decision-Support System to support early recognition of SIRS in paediatric intensive care patients. This assessment will be rated by the primary goals, the sensitivity and specificity of the system. Two experienced paediatric intensivists, who are blinded for the CDSS results, will analyse the electronic patient file (EPF) for SIRS criteria and thus establish our Goldstandard. All SIRS events recognized by the CDSS during the patient's stay are taken into account and will be compared with the established Goldstandard. The secondary goal of this trial is to evaluate the CDSS-results with the assessment of SIRS by paediatric doctors during their routine work on the PICU.
NeoAMR Observational Study in Neonatal Sepsis
Neonatal SEPSISProspective, multinational, multicentre, observational cohort study of neonatal sepsis in partner institutions. The cohort study will be designed to evaluate health care utilization and current clinical practice and to assess risk factors for and outcomes of babies with neonatal sepsis (culture-negative and culture-positive).
Early Identification of SEPsis SIGNs in Emergency Department
InfectionSepsisObjective of SepSIGN project is to validate biomarkers able to predict the clinical worsening of patients freshly admitted at Emergency Department. Targeted population is adult patients, freshly admitted at ED, with a suspected or confirmed infection.
Identification of Cardiovascular and Molecular Prognostic Factors for the Mid- and Long-term Outcome...
SepsisSeptic Cardiomyopathy1 moreSepsis is a life-threatening condition which can affect people of any age. An infection triggers a host response resulting in organ failure. The extent of the organ dysfunction varies between patients and during the course of the condition. Thus far, the only causal treatment option consists in treating the infection early e. g. by an operation or the use of antibiotics. Owing to advances in modern critical care, more patients survive sepsis. Nonetheless, sepsis survivors frequently show impaired organ function, physical disability and considerably decreased health-related quality of life. It is hypothesized that sepsis-induced cardiac dysfunction - septic cardiomyopathy - may influence mortality. The relationship between occurrence of cardiovascular dysfunction and metabolic changes in the course of sepsis remains unclear. Therefore, the aim of this study is the investigation of cardiovascular function, oxygen consumption and metabolic changes in septic patients. Apart from cardiological routine procedures (echo- and electrocardiography) a newly developed method for measuring the oxygen tension and consumption, bioelectrical impedance analysis for body composition estimation and liver fibrosis assessment via transient elastography will be employed. Through blood, stool and urine analysis, both routine parameters and parameters focusing on patient metabolism will be analysed. Septic patients will be assessed in the acute phase (3 and 7 days after sepsis diagnosis), the stable phase (at intensive care unit discharge) and after full or incomplete recovery (during two outpatient visits at 6 and 12 months after sepsis diagnosis). The results will be compared with healthy individuals and patients with existing heart disease (cardiomyopathy). The study aims to identify clinical parameters and signaling pathways involved in the development and course of sepsis. Furthermore, specific parameters associated with the medium- and long-term health status, physical performance and quality of life after sepsis are to be identified. The overall aim of the study is the development of novel diagnostic and therapeutic approaches in sepsis.
Is Neutrophil to Lymphocyte Ratio a Prognostic Factor of Sepsis in Newborns With Operated Congenital...
Sepsis NewbornThe use of neutrophil lymphocyte ratio is useful for the detection of infection status in newborns after surgery
Diagnostic and Prognostic Biomarkers of Sepsis
SepsisThis study aims to evaluate sepsis biomarkers as soluble triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 1 (sTREM-1) and soluble urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (sUPAR) in diagnosis of sepsis in comparison to the traditional blood culture and C-reactive protein (CRP) and to evaluate the prognostic value of these biomarkers in comparison to sequential organ failure assessment score (SOFA score), Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation II ( APACHI score), 28 day mortality.
Lactate Use as Triage Tool in Sepsis : Veinous, Capillary or Arterial?
SepsisSevere sepsis and septic shocks are increasingly codified. A biomarker as Lactate is very interesting to detect those situations. Usually, lactate used is arterial but results are often too slow to obtain if we want to respect Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines. Some analyzers (EKF diagnostics Lactate Scout*) can give results in 15 seconds. We hypothesized that capillary lactate, easy to sample, tested with this analyzer may detect earlier those infections states and we want to find the most accurate site to detect severe sepsis (capillary, venous or arterial sample).