Systemic infection – Diagnostics

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Systemic infection, often called sepsis, occurs when the body’s response to an infection becomes dangerous and starts affecting multiple organs throughout the body. Early recognition and rapid medical action can make the difference between recovery and serious complications, making it essential to understand when and how this condition is diagnosed.

Introduction: Who Should Undergo Diagnostics

If you suspect you might have a serious infection, getting checked quickly is extremely important. Sepsis, the medical term for a severe systemic infection, is a medical emergency that needs to be diagnosed and treated as soon as possible. The risk of death increases by up to 7.6% with every hour that passes before treatment begins, which is why recognizing when to seek medical help can be life-saving.[1]

You should seek immediate medical care if you have an existing infection that is not improving or is getting worse. Common infections that can progress to sepsis include lung infections like pneumonia, urinary tract infections (especially if you have a catheter), infections in the digestive system such as appendicitis or bowel problems, and skin infections.[1] Anyone can develop sepsis, but certain groups face higher risks and should be especially vigilant about symptoms.

People over age 65 are at particularly high risk for developing sepsis, as the body’s immune response changes with age. Pregnant women, newborns, and infants also belong to high-risk groups. If you have certain medical conditions like diabetes, obesity, cancer, or kidney disease, your risk increases significantly. The same applies if you have a weakened immune system for any reason. People currently hospitalized for other medical reasons, those with severe injuries like large burns or wounds, and anyone with medical devices such as catheters, IV lines, or breathing tubes should also be closely monitored for signs of infection.[1]

⚠️ Important
Sepsis symptoms can be subtle, particularly in older adults and people who are immunocompromised. The clinical presentation may not always be obvious, so any concerning change in health status during or after an infection should prompt immediate medical evaluation. Do not wait for symptoms to become severe before seeking help.

Most cases of sepsis actually begin before a patient arrives at the hospital. Nearly a quarter to a third of people with sepsis had visited a healthcare provider in the week before they were hospitalized.[7] This means that if you’ve recently been treated for an infection and things don’t seem to be improving, returning for evaluation is not only appropriate but potentially life-saving.

Diagnostic Methods for Identifying Systemic Infection

When you arrive at a medical facility with suspected sepsis, healthcare providers use multiple approaches to diagnose the condition. Diagnosis begins with a thorough medical assessment that includes examining physical findings and conducting various tests. The goal is not only to confirm sepsis but also to identify the specific infection causing it and assess how much it has affected your body’s organs.[7]

Physical Examination and Clinical Findings

Your healthcare provider will first perform a physical examination looking for specific signs that suggest sepsis. They will check for fever or, in some cases, an unusually low body temperature called hypothermia. Your heart rate will be measured to see if it’s abnormally fast. Blood pressure readings are critical because low blood pressure is a key indicator that sepsis may be progressing to the more dangerous stage called septic shock. The provider will also observe your breathing to see if you’re breathing rapidly or having difficulty getting enough air.[7]

Beyond these vital signs, the physical exam looks for other telling symptoms. Your doctor may notice if you appear confused or disoriented, as changes in mental status are common with sepsis. They’ll check your skin, which might appear clammy or sweaty. If the infection that triggered sepsis involved your bloodstream directly (a condition called septicemia or blood poisoning), you might develop a distinctive rash that makes your skin appear red and discolored, sometimes with small, dark-red spots.[1]

Other symptoms healthcare providers look for during examination include signs of reduced urination, extreme weakness or low energy, shaking or chills, and extreme pain or discomfort that seems out of proportion to the known infection.[1] These symptoms can vary from person to person, and they may appear differently in children compared to adults, which is why experienced clinical judgment is so important.

Blood Tests and Laboratory Analysis

Blood testing plays a central role in diagnosing sepsis and determining its severity. Several different blood tests are typically ordered when sepsis is suspected. One of the most important is blood cultures, which look for bacterial infections, fungal infections, or evidence of viral infections like influenza. These cultures involve taking blood samples and placing them in special conditions where any bacteria or fungi present can grow and be identified. This helps doctors determine exactly which germ is causing the infection so they can choose the most effective antibiotics.[7]

Another critical blood test measures your lactate level. Lactate is a substance that builds up in your blood when your body’s tissues aren’t getting enough oxygen, which commonly happens during sepsis. The measurement of serum lactate has become so important that it’s now incorporated into the latest definition of septic shock. Healthcare providers may check your lactate level multiple times (typically every four to six hours) until it returns to normal, as this lactate-guided approach has been shown to reduce overall mortality compared to not monitoring lactate at all.[9]

Additional blood tests look for evidence of organ dysfunction. These include tests that check how well your liver and kidneys are working, tests that measure electrolyte imbalances (which are disruptions in important minerals in your blood), and tests that assess whether your blood is clotting properly. Blood clotting problems are particularly concerning in sepsis because the condition can trigger abnormal blood clot formation in blood vessels, reducing blood flow to organs.[1]

White blood cell counts are also examined, as abnormal levels can indicate how your immune system is responding to the infection. Healthcare providers also look at your blood glucose (sugar) levels, as high blood sugar in someone who doesn’t have diabetes can be a sign of severe sepsis.[1]

Other Laboratory Tests

Beyond blood samples, other laboratory tests help identify where the infection started. Urine samples are commonly collected and analyzed, especially since urinary tract infections are a frequent source of sepsis. If you have an open wound, fluid from that wound may be sampled and tested. Healthcare providers might also collect mucus and saliva from your respiratory tract if a lung infection is suspected.[9] All these samples are sent to the laboratory where they can be examined under microscopes and cultured to grow and identify any bacteria, fungi, or other pathogens present.

Imaging Studies

Imaging tests help doctors see inside your body to locate the source of infection and check for complications. X-rays are often the first imaging test performed, particularly chest X-rays that can reveal infections in the lungs such as pneumonia, which is the most common cause of sepsis.[9]

Ultrasound examinations use sound waves to create real-time images and can be especially helpful for finding infections in organs like the gallbladder, kidneys, or other abdominal structures. This type of imaging is non-invasive and doesn’t involve radiation, making it a safe option for many patients.[9]

For more detailed views, computed tomography or CT scans may be ordered. These scans take X-rays from multiple angles and use computer processing to create cross-sectional images of the body. CT scans are particularly valuable for identifying infections in the liver, pancreas, appendix, or other abdominal and pelvic organs that might not show up clearly on regular X-rays.[9]

Magnetic resonance imaging or MRI uses radio waves and powerful magnets instead of X-rays to produce detailed images. MRI can be especially helpful when doctors need to examine soft tissues or suspect bone infections that other imaging might miss.[9]

Diagnostic Tools and Scoring Systems

Healthcare providers use standardized scoring systems to help recognize sepsis early and assess its severity. The Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score is now recommended as an important tool for diagnosis. This scoring system evaluates how well various organs are functioning by looking at factors like breathing, blood clotting, liver function, circulation, brain function, and kidney function. A simplified version called quick SOFA (or qSOFA) can be used in settings outside the intensive care unit to help identify patients who might have sepsis before they become critically ill.[6]

These scoring systems have largely replaced older criteria, though some hospitals may still use additional assessment tools. The key point is that healthcare providers now have standardized, evidence-based methods to recognize sepsis early, which is critical because early treatment dramatically improves outcomes.

Diagnostics for Clinical Trial Qualification

When patients with sepsis are being considered for enrollment in clinical trials, standardized diagnostic criteria become even more important. Clinical trials testing new treatments for sepsis typically require specific laboratory findings and clinical measurements to ensure that all enrolled patients truly have the condition being studied.

Blood cultures remain a fundamental requirement for most sepsis clinical trials, as researchers need documented evidence of infection. Trials may require positive cultures showing specific types of bacteria or other pathogens. Some studies focus on particular sources of infection, such as pneumonia or urinary tract infections, and would require imaging or other tests confirming that specific source.[9]

Lactate measurements are frequently used as enrollment criteria since elevated lactate levels indicate tissue damage and predict worse outcomes. Many trials specify a minimum lactate level for inclusion, ensuring they’re studying patients with significant illness severity. Serial lactate measurements showing how levels change over time may also be required.[9]

Organ function tests are crucial for clinical trial enrollment because sepsis is fundamentally defined by organ dysfunction. Trials may require evidence that at least one major organ system is affected, demonstrated through tests like kidney function panels, liver function tests, or assessments of respiratory function. The degree of organ dysfunction, often quantified using the SOFA scoring system, frequently determines which patients are eligible for particular studies.[6]

Blood pressure measurements and requirements for vasopressor medications (drugs that raise blood pressure) are common qualifying criteria, especially for trials studying septic shock. Researchers may require that patients have persistent low blood pressure despite receiving adequate intravenous fluids, or that they need certain doses of specific vasopressor drugs.[9]

Trials may also measure levels of specific biomarkers, which are molecules in the blood that indicate disease presence or severity. Procalcitonin is one such biomarker increasingly used in both clinical care and research. This protein rises during bacterial infections and can help distinguish bacterial sepsis from other conditions. Some clinical trials use procalcitonin levels as enrollment criteria or to guide when antibiotics should be started or stopped.[14]

Imaging studies showing the infection source and extent of organ involvement may be required for trial enrollment. For trials focusing on specific infection types, such as pneumonia-related sepsis, chest imaging demonstrating lung infiltrates would be mandatory. Similarly, trials studying abdominal sepsis would require CT scans or ultrasounds confirming intra-abdominal infection.[9]

Clinical trials often have specific timing requirements for diagnostic tests. Tests may need to be performed within a certain number of hours after hospital admission or after sepsis symptoms first appeared. This ensures that researchers are studying interventions given at comparable disease stages across all enrolled patients. Some trials require that certain tests be repeated at specified intervals to track how patients respond to the experimental treatment being studied.

Prognosis and Survival Rate

Prognosis

The prognosis for systemic infection depends greatly on how quickly treatment begins and how severely the infection has affected the body. Many people who survive sepsis recover completely and their lives return to normal. However, as with some other serious illnesses requiring intensive medical care, some patients experience long-term effects that may not become apparent until after they leave the hospital.[16]

Several factors influence outcomes. Patients who receive treatment meeting all four clinical goals—blood cultures before antibiotics, lactate measurement within 90 minutes, intravenous antibiotics within 180 minutes, and adequate fluid resuscitation within 180 minutes—have significantly better survival chances. The type of infection causing sepsis also matters, as does the patient’s age and overall health before becoming sick. People over 65 face higher risks, as do those with existing medical conditions like chronic lung disease, weakened immune systems, diabetes, or kidney disease.[1]

While many recover, sepsis can cause long-term effects including decreased mental functioning, difficulty sleeping, disabling muscle and joint pain, kidney failure, respiratory problems, loss of self-esteem, nightmares, panic attacks, and in severe cases, risk of amputation. Some survivors develop what’s called post-sepsis syndrome, experiencing prolonged fatigue, weakness, confusion, anxiety, depression, or post-traumatic stress disorder that can last for months or even years.[16][10]

Recovery from sepsis typically begins in the hospital with rehabilitation that slowly helps patients move around and care for themselves. After going home, the body and mind need considerable time to heal. Patients may experience ongoing weakness, difficulty with everyday tasks, poor concentration, and emotional challenges. Working with healthcare providers to determine appropriate rehabilitation plans and safe activity levels is essential for the best possible recovery.[16]

Survival rate

More than 1.7 million people in the United States develop sepsis each year. Despite modern medical advances, standardized treatment protocols, and increased physician awareness that have significantly improved outcomes over the past decade, mortality rates remain between 20% and 36%. Approximately 270,000 deaths occur annually in the United States due to sepsis, making it the leading cause of death in non-coronary intensive care units and the 10th leading cause of death overall.[1][11]

At least 350,000 adults who develop sepsis each year either die during their hospitalization or are discharged to hospice care. Notably, one in three people who die in a hospital had sepsis during their hospital stay, highlighting how dangerous this condition remains even with medical treatment.[7]

When sepsis progresses to severe sepsis with documented organ dysfunction, approximately 30% of patients experience death. For those who progress to the most dangerous stage called septic shock—where blood pressure drops dangerously low despite treatment—mortality rates climb even higher, reaching between 40% and 60-80% depending on the study. About half of severe sepsis survivors go on to face post-sepsis syndrome with its associated long-term health problems.[11][1]

Hospital readmission is common among sepsis survivors, with as many as 19% of people originally hospitalized with sepsis being readmitted within 30 days, and about 40% returning within 90 days. This high readmission rate reflects both the severity of the original illness and the lasting vulnerability sepsis creates.[15]

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Systemic infection

References

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/12361-sepsis

https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/002294.htm

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/sepsis/symptoms-causes/syc-20351214

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemic_disease

https://fiveable.me/key-terms/microbio/systemic-infection

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK547669/

https://www.cdc.gov/sepsis/about/index.html

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/12361-sepsis

https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/sepsis/diagnosis-treatment/drc-20351219

https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/sepsis/treatment-and-recovery/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5389495/

https://emedicine.medscape.com/article/234587-treatment

https://www.cdc.gov/sepsis/about/index.html

https://www.aafp.org/pubs/afp/issues/2020/0401/p409.html

https://www.sepsis.org/sepsis-basics/treatment/

https://www.cdc.gov/sepsis/living-with/index.html

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/12361-sepsis

https://newsinhealth.nih.gov/2021/01/staying-safe-sepsis

https://draxe.com/health/sepsis/

https://portsmouthhospital.com/blog/entry/how-to-prevent-sepsis-5-actions-you-can-take-to-reduce-your-risk

https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/sepsis/treatment-and-recovery/

https://www.kidney.org/kidney-topics/sepsis

https://www.mercyone.org/blog-articles/guarding-against-sepsis-tips-staying-safe-and-taking-action

https://medlineplus.gov/diagnostictests.html

https://www.questdiagnostics.com/

https://www.healthdirect.gov.au/diagnostic-tests

https://www.who.int/health-topics/diagnostics

https://www.yalemedicine.org/clinical-keywords/diagnostic-testsprocedures

https://www.nibib.nih.gov/science-education/science-topics/rapid-diagnostics

https://www.health.harvard.edu/diagnostic-tests-and-medical-procedures

FAQ

How quickly do I need to get diagnosed if I suspect sepsis?

Sepsis diagnosis and treatment must happen as quickly as possible because it’s a medical emergency. The risk of death increases by up to 7.6% with every hour that passes before treatment begins. If you have an infection that’s not improving or is getting worse, along with symptoms like confusion, rapid breathing, fever, or extreme weakness, you should seek emergency medical care immediately. Most hospitals aim to complete diagnostic tests and start treatment within one to three hours of your arrival.[1][15]

What is the main test that confirms sepsis?

There isn’t one single test that confirms sepsis. Instead, doctors use a combination of physical examination findings and multiple tests. Blood cultures are crucial for identifying the specific bacteria or fungi causing infection. Lactate levels in your blood help assess how severely sepsis is affecting your tissues. Additional blood tests check for organ dysfunction, blood clotting problems, and signs of inflammation. The diagnosis is ultimately based on evidence of infection plus signs that your organs aren’t working properly.[7][9]

Can sepsis be detected with a simple blood test?

While blood tests are essential for diagnosing sepsis, they’re not quite “simple” in the sense that multiple different blood tests are needed. Blood cultures take time to grow bacteria and identify them. Lactate measurements provide immediate information about tissue damage. Other blood tests checking organ function, white blood cell counts, and clotting ability add important pieces to the diagnostic puzzle. Healthcare providers interpret all these results together along with your symptoms and physical examination findings to diagnose sepsis.[9]

Why do doctors need imaging tests if they already suspect sepsis from blood work?

Imaging tests like X-rays, ultrasounds, CT scans, or MRIs help doctors identify where in your body the infection started and how far it has spread. Finding the infection source is crucial because some infections require surgical treatment in addition to antibiotics. For example, if sepsis stems from an infected appendix or an abscess (pocket of infection), surgery may be needed to remove the infected tissue. Imaging also helps doctors check for complications like fluid collections or organ damage.[9]

What happens if my blood cultures are negative but doctors still think I have sepsis?

Blood cultures don’t always grow bacteria even when sepsis is present. This can happen if you received antibiotics before the blood was drawn, if the infection is caused by organisms that don’t grow well in standard culture conditions, or if the infection is viral rather than bacterial. Doctors diagnose sepsis based on the complete clinical picture—your symptoms, physical examination findings, organ function tests, and other laboratory results—not just blood culture results. If they have strong evidence of infection and organ dysfunction, they will treat you for sepsis even with negative cultures.[7]

🎯 Key takeaways

  • Sepsis is a medical emergency where every hour counts—the risk of death increases by up to 7.6% with each hour before treatment begins, making rapid diagnosis absolutely critical for survival.
  • Anyone with an infection that isn’t improving or is getting worse should seek immediate medical attention, especially if experiencing confusion, rapid breathing, fever, extreme pain, or clammy skin.
  • Diagnosis involves multiple approaches working together: physical examination for vital signs and symptoms, blood tests including cultures and lactate levels, laboratory analysis of other body fluids, and imaging studies to locate the infection source.
  • Blood cultures identify the specific germ causing infection, but lactate measurements are equally important as they reveal how much tissue damage has occurred and help guide treatment intensity.
  • Healthcare providers now use standardized scoring systems like SOFA and quick SOFA to recognize sepsis earlier, replacing older diagnostic criteria and improving the chances of timely intervention.
  • Despite all diagnostic tests being performed, mortality rates for sepsis remain between 20-36%, with approximately 270,000 deaths annually in the United States, underscoring why early detection is so vital.
  • People over 65, pregnant women, those with chronic illnesses like diabetes or cancer, and anyone with a weakened immune system face higher risks and should be especially alert to infection symptoms.
  • Most sepsis cases begin before hospital arrival, and nearly a quarter to a third of sepsis patients had seen a healthcare provider within the week before hospitalization, meaning don’t hesitate to return if symptoms worsen.