29
Feb

A question to test the public about how well they are prepared to know how to deal with it. Answers posted after resolved.

(No copy and paste)


Answer:
ehhhh, you mean like sepsis??

high fever

lethargy

early symptoms? late symptoms?

multi organ system failure?

No, Dr K. You said not to copy and paste and spencer is telling us straight out that he copied his answer from mosby's.

that's some crap. he should have to stay after school for cheating.

SPENCER = CHEATER

oh, BTW, i had a patient once die on me, on the floor, with sepsis. 41 yo female with a total of 6 amputations. BKA, AKA, then up to the hips. Feces somehow got into her hip stump. she died within 2 days. fever over 105. no UOP. tachy, turned gray. it was awful. vre and mrsa in the hip stump.


Answer:
http://www.mayoclinic.com/heal… Report It


Answer:
fever, high pulse rate or heart rate. Would need to have a cut that was infected some how.

Answer:
Usually if a red line is, for instance, going up your leg.

Answer:
Blood poisoning? Your question is confusing. R U suggesting blood can poison or are you asking about organic poisoning opposed to non-organic poisoning which will have different symptoms depending of the chemical make up of the substance.

Answer:
Had it myself. Had a dark line running from the middle finger on my left hand up about half way up my arm. Knew it was blood poisoning because I work with mortar that has lime in it and lime is caustic. Put me in the hospital for a couple of days with IV's in me

Answer:
I've written this assuming we are speaking of bacteremia (common blood poisoning), and not anything exotic like a fungal infestation or transfusion medium rejection.

From Mosby's Medical Dictionary, the normal symptoms can include all of the following:

Fever and chills

Low temperature

Paleness of skin color

Listlessness

Changes in mental status

Rapid breathing

Increased heart rate

Decreased urine output

Low blood pressure

Shock

Problems with bleeding or clotting

Most commonly, bacteremia is initially diagnosed by high fever, rapid homeostasis processes, and a lack of blood coagulation around areas of infection. More severe cases are easily identified by impaired motor reactions and dropping core body temperature.

This entry was posted on Friday, February 29th, 2008 at 6:16 pm and is filed under Diseases. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or TrackBack URI from your own site.

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