Maternal Sepsis
WHO Definition (2017)
“A life-threatening condition defined as organ dysfunction resulting from infection during pregnancy, childbirth, post-abortion, or postpartum period.”
Pregnancy Physiology Relevant to Sepsis
Cardiovascular Changes
- Increased cardiac output
- Increased heart rate
- Reduced SVR
- Physiological mild hypotension
Thus:
- Tachycardia may be underestimated
- Shock may present late
Respiratory Changes
- Increased minute ventilation
- Mild respiratory alkalosis normal
Thus:
- Tachypnea may be early sign
- Rapid desaturation occurs
Hematological Changes
- Physiological leukocytosis
- WBC may normally be 12,000–16,000
- Hypercoagulable state
Thus:
- WBC alone unreliable
- High risk of DIC
Renal Changes
- Increased GFR
- Lower baseline creatinine
Thus:Creatinine 1 mg/dL may indicate AKI in pregnancy
Common Sources of Infection
|
Source |
Examples |
|
Genital tract |
Endometritis, chorioamnionitis |
|
Urinary tract |
Pyelonephritis, CAUTI |
|
Surgical site |
Cesarean wound infection |
|
Breast |
Mastitis, breast abscess |
|
Respiratory |
Pneumonia, aspiration |
|
Intra-abdominal |
Septic abortion, retained products |
|
Skin/soft tissue |
Necrotizing fasciitis |
|
IV line/catheter |
Catheter-related bloodstream infection |
Risk Factors
|
Obstetric Risk Factors |
Medical Risk Factors |
Healthcare Factors |
|
Cesarean section |
Diabetes |
Poor asepsis |
|
Prolonged labor |
Anemia |
Unsafe abortion |
|
PROM/PPROM |
Obesity |
Delayed antibiotics |
|
Retained placenta |
HIV/immunosuppression |
Delayed referral |
|
Instrumental delivery |
Malnutrition |
|
|
Postpartum hemorrhage |
|
|
|
Frequent vaginal examinations |
|
|
Microbiology
Maternal sepsis is often polymicrobial.
Gram-positive
- Group A Streptococcus (GAS),Group B Streptococcus,Staphylococcus aureus,Enterococcus
Gram-negative
- E. coli,Klebsiella,Pseudomonas
Anaerobes
- Bacteroides,Clostridium
Others
- Listeria,Influenza,COVID-19,Malaria (in endemic areas)
Clinical Features
General Symptoms
- Fever or hypothermia
- Malaise
- Chills
- Weakness
Early Signs
- Tachycardia
- Tachypnea
- Altered mental state
Obstetric Clues
- Uterine tenderness
- Foul-smelling lochia
- Abdominal pain
- Perineal pain
- Wound discharge
- Breast tenderness
Severe Disease Features
- Hypotension
- Oliguria
- Cyanosis
- Respiratory distress
- Confusion
- Lactate elevation
Diagnosis
Maternal sepsis is primarily a clinical diagnosis.
Do not delay antibiotics awaiting confirmation.
Investigations
Basic Labs
- CBC
- CRP
- Procalcitonin
- Renal function
- LFT
- Coagulation profile
- ABG
- Lactate
Cultures
Obtain before antibiotics if possible:
- Blood cultures ×2
- Urine culture
- High vaginal/cervical swab
- Wound cultures
- Sputum culture if indicated
Imaging
Ultrasound
Useful for:
- Retained products
- Pelvic abscess
- Septic pelvic thrombophlebitis
Chest X-ray
For:Pneumonia/ARDS/Pulmonary edema
CT/MRI
If source unclear:
- Pelvic abscess
- Necrotizing infection
- Septic thrombophlebitis
Lactate
Important marker of:
- Tissue hypoperfusion
- Severity
- Response to treatment
Lactate >2 mmol/L suggests severe disease.
Sepsis Scoring in Pregnancy
Traditional scores may fail due to pregnancy physiology.
qSOFA Limitations
Less sensitive in pregnancy.
Modified Obstetric Early Warning Score (MEOWS)
Management
Fluid Therapy
Initial:Balanced crystalloids preferred
Usually:30 mL/kg for hypotension/lactate elevation
But pregnancy requires caution:
- Increased pulmonary edema risk
Frequent reassessment essential.
Empirical Antibiotics
Depends on source.
Antibiotic Principles in Pregnancy
Choose drugs considering:
- Placental transfer
- Fetal safety
- Breastfeeding compatibility
Postpartum Endometritis
Common regimen:Clindamycin + gentamicin
Alternative:Piperacillin-tazobactam
Severe Maternal Sepsis / Septic Shock
Broad-spectrum options:
- Piperacillin-tazobactam
- Meropenem
- Cefepime + metronidazole
- Add:Vancomycin if MRSA risk
Suspected GAS Toxic Shock
Add:Clindamycin
Reason:Suppresses toxin production
Source Control
One of the most important aspects.
|
Source |
Source Control |
|
Retained products |
Evacuation |
|
Abscess |
Drainage |
|
Necrotizing fasciitis |
Debridement |
|
Infected wound |
Exploration |
|
Chorioamnionitis |
Delivery |
|
Septic uterus |
Hysterectomy sometimes |
Role of Delivery
Sometimes fetus/placenta is infection source.
Indications may include:
- Chorioamnionitis
- Fetal distress
- Maternal deterioration
Decision individualized.
