Treatment Pathway

Treatment of Sepsis

Sepsis is a life-threatening systemic response to infection causing organ dysfunction. It is identified by abnormal temperature, heart rate, breathing, and altered mental status; prompt antibiotic treatment and fluid resuscitation are essential.

WHO Global Antimicrobial GuidelinesIDSA (Infectious Diseases Society of America)NICE (UK)ECDC (European Centre for Disease Prevention)Surviving Sepsis Campaign
SymptomsCausesTreatmentWhen to See a DoctorRelated Questions

Managing Sepsis effectively requires a combination of medical treatment, lifestyle modification, and regular monitoring. With a structured management plan, most people with Sepsis can maintain a good quality of life and prevent serious complications.

First-Line Treatment Principles

What to Do Now

  1. Learn your personal risk factors for Sepsis (family history, age, lifestyle)
  2. Attend regular health check-ups and screening tests appropriate for your age and risk
  3. Track new or changing symptoms, especially those associated with Sepsis
  4. Use our AI symptom checker to assess whether your symptoms fit an early Sepsis pattern
  5. Discuss preventive strategies and early monitoring with your GP
  6. Build a personalised management plan with your GP or specialist
  7. Adhere consistently to prescribed medications — do not stop without medical advice
  8. Adopt a Sepsis-appropriate diet (anti-inflammatory, low-glycaemic, or disease-specific)

Non-Pharmacological Management

Treatment Goals

🎯Microbiological eradication: negative cultures, resolution of pathogen-specific markers
🎯Clinical cure: resolution of fever, inflammatory markers, and organ dysfunction
🎯Prevention of complications: abscess formation, septicaemia, chronic infection
🎯Minimise antimicrobial resistance development through appropriate stewardship
🎯Return to full functional capacity and prevention of recurrence

Monitoring Parameters

Red Flags — When to Escalate

Escalation Criteria

Special Populations

Immunocompromised: HIV, transplant, chemotherapy patients need broader empirical coverage and lower threshold for invasive investigation
Pregnancy: many antibiotics restricted (fluoroquinolones, tetracyclines, aminoglycosides) — seek specialist guidance
Children: weight-based dosing; higher suspicion for unusual organisms (meningococcal in adolescents, Haemophilus in unvaccinated)
Elderly: impaired immune response; higher risk of drug toxicity; atypical presentations (confusion as only sign)

Clinical Insights

Compare With Similar Conditions

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