Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis

Background. Lactic acid level is one index which is currently actively researched for its role in pregnancy-associated sepsis (PAS). We aimed to quantify the severity of PAS using lactic acid levels. Methods. All pregnant, post-abortal (2 weeks) and postpartum women (up to 6 weeks) with clinical se...

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Main Authors: R Agarwal, R Yadav, S Garg, H M Srivastava, G Radhakrishnan, A Tiwari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Health and Medical Publishing Group 2018-05-01
Series:South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Online Access:http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/1219/603
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spelling doaj-d0db604997c841c9b24366eae37286372020-11-25T02:51:14ZengHealth and Medical Publishing GroupSouth African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology2305-88622018-05-012415710.7196/sajog.1219Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsisR AgarwalR YadavS GargH M SrivastavaG RadhakrishnanA TiwariBackground. Lactic acid level is one index which is currently actively researched for its role in pregnancy-associated sepsis (PAS). We aimed to quantify the severity of PAS using lactic acid levels. Methods. All pregnant, post-abortal (2 weeks) and postpartum women (up to 6 weeks) with clinical sepsis were enrolled as per systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria, and lactic acid levels were estimated at admission. Severe PAS was defined as one or more organ dysfunctions due to sepsis. The severity of obstetric sepsis was graded according to number of organ failures. Results. There were 42 patients with non-severe PAS, and 58 with severe PAS. The ≥4 mmol/L lactic acid threshold had 88.10% specificity and 37.93% sensitivity for detection of severe PAS. A significant difference (p=0.006) was found between lactic acid levels (mean (standard deviation (SD)) in cases with single OF (n=24; 3.02 (0.92) mmol/L) v. multi-organ failure (n=34; 3.70 (0.81) mmol/L). The mean (SD) lactic acid levels (3.76 (0.97) mmol/L) with any type of culture-positive PAS cases (n=35) were significantly higher than in culture-negative PAS cases (2.95 (0.98); p=0.0001). Conclusions. Lactic acid level ≥4 mmol/L had reasonable specificity for severity and culture positivity in PAS. A serum lactic acid level ≥3 mmol/L was associated with more number of organ failures.http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/1219/603
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author R Agarwal
R Yadav
S Garg
H M Srivastava
G Radhakrishnan
A Tiwari
spellingShingle R Agarwal
R Yadav
S Garg
H M Srivastava
G Radhakrishnan
A Tiwari
Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
author_facet R Agarwal
R Yadav
S Garg
H M Srivastava
G Radhakrishnan
A Tiwari
author_sort R Agarwal
title Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
title_short Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
title_full Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
title_fullStr Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
title_full_unstemmed Lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
title_sort lactic acid as an adjuvant marker in pregnancyassociated sepsis
publisher Health and Medical Publishing Group
series South African Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
issn 2305-8862
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Background. Lactic acid level is one index which is currently actively researched for its role in pregnancy-associated sepsis (PAS). We aimed to quantify the severity of PAS using lactic acid levels. Methods. All pregnant, post-abortal (2 weeks) and postpartum women (up to 6 weeks) with clinical sepsis were enrolled as per systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria, and lactic acid levels were estimated at admission. Severe PAS was defined as one or more organ dysfunctions due to sepsis. The severity of obstetric sepsis was graded according to number of organ failures. Results. There were 42 patients with non-severe PAS, and 58 with severe PAS. The ≥4 mmol/L lactic acid threshold had 88.10% specificity and 37.93% sensitivity for detection of severe PAS. A significant difference (p=0.006) was found between lactic acid levels (mean (standard deviation (SD)) in cases with single OF (n=24; 3.02 (0.92) mmol/L) v. multi-organ failure (n=34; 3.70 (0.81) mmol/L). The mean (SD) lactic acid levels (3.76 (0.97) mmol/L) with any type of culture-positive PAS cases (n=35) were significantly higher than in culture-negative PAS cases (2.95 (0.98); p=0.0001). Conclusions. Lactic acid level ≥4 mmol/L had reasonable specificity for severity and culture positivity in PAS. A serum lactic acid level ≥3 mmol/L was associated with more number of organ failures.
url http://www.sajog.org.za/index.php/sajog/article/download/1219/603
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