Journal article

Urosepsis. Update on diagnosis and treatment


Authors listWagenlehner, F. M. E.; Alidjanov, J.; Pilatz, A.

Publication year2016

Pages454-45+

JournalUrologe A

Volume number55

Issue number4

ISSN0340-2592

eISSN1433-0563

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-016-0066-9

PublisherSpringer


Abstract

Sepsis is an acute systemic response to the presence of bacteria and bacterial components in the macroorganism, and urosepsis is defined as sepsis caused by an infection in the urogenital tract. The urogenital tract is considered to be responsible for about 30 % of the cases of septic processes, whereby obstructive uropathy is causative in about 80 % of these cases. Sepsis manifests as an initially predominant proinflammatory response by widespread release of inflammatory mediators as a result of activation of cells responsive to infectious components such as bacterial toxins, which is then accompanied by a counter-regulatory anti-inflammatory response.

Prior to antibiotic therapy, blood and urine cultures are recommended, while procalcitonin and lactate can be considered diagnostically relevant biomarkers. Furthermore, early imaging to localize the level of obstruction and infectious focus should be carried out. Treatment is divided into causal therapy (antimicrobial therapy and infectious source), supportive therapy (fluids and oxygen administration), and adjunctive therapy (sepsis-specific therapy).




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWagenlehner, F., Alidjanov, J. and Pilatz, A. (2016) Urosepsis. Update on diagnosis and treatment, Urologe A, 55(4), pp. 454-45+. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-016-0066-9

APA Citation styleWagenlehner, F., Alidjanov, J., & Pilatz, A. (2016). Urosepsis. Update on diagnosis and treatment. Urologe A. 55(4), 454-45+. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00120-016-0066-9



Keywords


Anti-bacterial agentsGERMANObstructive uropathySystemic inflammatory response syndromeUrogenital system

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:34