Jafar Malmir; Ehsan Bolvardi; Monavar Afzal Aghaee
Abstract
The severe sepsis and septic shock are as common and lethal that emergency physicians routinely confront. Actually, more than two thirds of sepsis patients present initially to the ED. Only a few laboratory tests for markers of sepsis are currently available. The serum lactate level can help in determining ...
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The severe sepsis and septic shock are as common and lethal that emergency physicians routinely confront. Actually, more than two thirds of sepsis patients present initially to the ED. Only a few laboratory tests for markers of sepsis are currently available. The serum lactate level can help in determining prognosis and to risk-stratify patients with severe sepsis. This independent review of the literature includes 83 studies published in all electronic-based database such as Elsevier, PubMed, and SID during the last 18 years (40–320 patients in each). Data gathered from English language articles and books published between 1995 and 2013. The serum lactate concentrations measured in almost all patients with severe sepsis raised at admission and were higher in patients who had the worst outcomes such as higher Apache-II and SOFA score. Serum lactate was associated with mortality independent of clinically apparent organ dysfunction and shock in patients with severe sepsis admitted to the emergency department and intensive care unit. This review focuses on the association between initial and serial serum lactate level and mortality in patients presenting to the emergency department with severe sepsis.