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CASE HISTORY


Two hours later: admitted to paediatric ward.


Nursing assessment: Temp 38.4, HR 172, RR 45, BP 112/50.
Small pin prick rash on abdomen


Ward SHO reviewed child
Sleepy but rousable, no neck stiffness or photophobia, HR 171.
No rash but he has a few old chickenpox scars.
Chest clear.


Diagnosis:  viral URTI.  Child sent home.

Child 3 years old with short history of fever, shaking and generally unwell.


ED Triage assessment:
High temperature, he looks flushed, no rash, unwell child.


Ten minutes later– ED SHO:
Febrile child, listless, irritable and drowsy.
Temp 39.7, HR 170, RR 55.
Pyrexial and drowsy: ? cause, refer to paediatric team.


  help

QUESTIONS ON CASE 2


     Q 7 of 12: Signs of septic shock?

YesNo <incorrect

INCORRECT : Yes: tachycardia, tachypnoea new rash, drowsiness, fever, rigors on presentation.
Further Information

Clinical signs of septicaemic shock

Septicaemia will lead to shock and multiorgan failure. Shock is a clinical diagnosis. The signs are a result of circulatory failure. The underlying pathophysiology of septicaemia and the capillary leak syndrome leading to these signs are briefly summarised in the pathophysiology section.

A child in early shock may still be alert and have a normal blood pressure.
febrile
Child lucid despite advancing septicaemia


The early signs of shock include:

  • Tachycardia
  • Cool peripheries (CRT>4 seconds) or toe-core temperature gap of >3 degrees
  • Pallor, mottling

  • Decreased urine output (<1ml/kg/hr)
  • Tachypnoea – secondary to acidosis and hypoxia

(In patients with meningococcal disease, signs of shock will usually co-exist with symptoms of septicaemia.)

As shock progresses further signs develop:

  • Metabolic acidosis with base deficit worse than -5

  • Hypoxia: PaO2 <10kPa in air or saturation < 95% in air
  • Increasing tachypnoea, tachycardia and gallop rhythm

Late signs of shock include:



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