Septic Shock with AKI on CKD, Hepatic Encephalopathy & Uncontrolled Diabetes

Case Presentation

A 62-year-old male presented to the ICU with fever, altered sensorium, hypotension, and reduced urine output for 24 hours.

Past Medical History

  • Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus – 15 years, uncontrolled (HbA1c 9.8%).
  • CKD stage 4 – baseline Cr 3.2 mg/dL.
  • Hypertension – 20 years.
  • Alcoholic liver disease – with prior variceal bleed.

Past Medical History

Septic shock with AKI (on CKD) + Hepatic encephalopathy (Grade II–III) + uncontrolled diabetes mellitus.

ICU Management (Day-wise with Symptomatic Treatment)

Day 1: Admission

  • Airway/Breathing: Intubated (GCS 7), on volume-controlled ventilation.
  • Circulation: Noradrenaline 0.2 mcg/kg/min started → MAP > 65 mmHg.
  • Fluids: 30 mL/kg balanced crystalloids (judicious in CKD).
  • Antibiotics: Piperacillin-tazobactam + Vancomycin (renal adjusted).
  • Hepatic encephalopathy: Lactulose (30 mL q6h), Rifaximin.
  • Glycemic control: Insulin infusion (target 140–180 mg/dL).
  • Stress ulcer prophylaxis: IV Pantoprazole 40 mg BD.
  • DVT prophylaxis: Compression stockings (anticoagulation withheld due to INR 1.8).
  • Symptomatic: Paracetamol for fever, ondansetron PRN.
  • Nutrition: Ryle’s tube started with trophic feeding (20 mL/hr).
  • Physiotherapy: Passive limb physiotherapy.
  • Monitoring: A-line, CVC, urine catheter.
  • Investigations
    • CBC: WBC 22,000. Hb 9.2. Plt 70,000.
    • Renal: Urea 148, Cr 5.6.
    • LFT: TB 4.8, INR 1.8.
    • ABG: pH 7.28, HCO₃⁻ 16, Lactate 5.2.

Day 2 ICU

  • Hemodynamics: Noradrenaline uptitrated (0.35 mcg/kg/min). Vasopressin added.
  • Renal support: SLED initiated (hyperkalemia, worsening acidosis).
  • Antibiotics: Continued.
  • Symptomatic: Antipyretic, stool softeners, electrolyte correction.
  • Nutrition: Renal-specific formula started at 20 mL/hr continuous.
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 20,500; Cr 6.2; INR 2.0; Lactate 4.8.

Day 3 ICU

  • Persistent fever → Escalated antibiotics to Meropenem + Linezolid.
  • Hepatic encephalopathy unchanged (drowsy, not following commands).
  • Nebulization: Duolin TDS + Budesonide BD (to prevent ventilator-associated atelectasis).
  • Paracetamol 1g IV for fever spikes.
  • Nutrition increased to 30 mL/hr.
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 19,000; Cr 5.8; INR 2.2.

Day 4 ICU

  • Vasopressors reducing.
  • Blood culture: Klebsiella pneumoniae (ESBL+) → switched to Meropenem + Colistin.
  • Renal: SLED repeated.
  • GI: Lactulose + rifaximin continued. Pantoprazole continued.
  • Bowel care: Added Cremaffin at night (constipation prevention).
  • Other care: Air bed, chest physiotherapy, pressure sore prevention.
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 15,500; Cr 4.9; TB 5.0.

Day 5 ICU

  • Noradrenaline tapering down (0.15 mcg/kg/min). Vasopressin stopped.
  • Patient opening eyes to pain (GCS E3VtM4).
  • Insulin infusion continued.
  • Tube feeding advanced to 40 mL/hr.
  • IV thiamine added (alcoholic liver disease).
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 13,000; Cr 4.2; Lactate 2.8.

Day 6 ICU

  • Vasopressors off. Stable MAP.
  • Hepatic encephalopathy improving (follows commands).
  • Chest X-ray: infiltrates resolving.
  • Extubation trial attempted → tolerated PSV for 2 hrs.
  • Symptomatic: Paracetamol PRN, nebulization continued, stool softeners.
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 11,800; Cr 3.8; INR 1.7.

Day 7 ICU

  • Extubated successfully to HFNC.
  • Alert, oriented, obeying commands.
  • Antibiotics continued (Meropenem + Colistin).
  • Lactulose + rifaximin continued.
  • Physiotherapy: active limb exercise, incentive spirometry.
  • Transferred to ward for step-down care.
  • Investigations:
    • WBC 10,200; Cr 3.5; TB 3.8; INR 1.6.

Supportive & Symptomatic Treatments Used

Category Drugs / Measures Justification
AntibioticsPiperacillin-tazobactam → Meropenem + Linezolid → Meropenem + Colistin (tailored to ESBL Klebsiella)Broad-spectrum, escalated with cultures
GILactulose, Rifaximin, Cremaffin, PantoprazoleHE management, constipation prevention, stress ulcer prophylaxis
RenalSLED dialysisHemodynamic stability, correct acidosis & hyperkalemia
Glycemic control Insulin infusion (titrated) Tight glucose control
VasopressorsNoradrenaline, VasopressinSeptic shock management
SymptomaticParacetamol (fever), Ondansetron (nausea), nebulization, thiamineSupportive care
ProphylaxisDVT stockings, air bed, chest physiotherapyPrevent VTE, pressure sores, VAP
NutritionRenal-specific enteral feeds (20 → 40 mL/hr)Energy + protein optimization

Key Lessons

  • Early cultures + targeted antibiotics saved the patient.
  • Dialysis (SLED) allowed safe clearance in septic shock with CKD.
  • Hepatic encephalopathy treatment (Lactulose + Rifaximin) must run parallel.
  • Supportive therapies (antacids, antipyretics, nutrition, physiotherapy) are as crucial as antibiotics and vasopressors

Reflections:- This case reminded us of three truths of ICU medicine:

  1. Sepsis is a race against time.
  2. Supportive care – antacids, feeding, physiotherapy, dialysis, fever control – is as life-saving as antibiotics.
  3. Recovery is not just about the body, but the spirit – of the patient, the family, and the ICU team

Mr. R left our ICU alive, weaker than before, but with a chance to live again. For us, it wasn’t just a clinical win – it was a human victory.

Final Diagnosis:-Septic Shock secondary to ESBL-positive Klebsiella pneumoniae pneumonia with Acute Kidney Injury (on CKD Stage 4), Hepatic Encephalopathy (Grade II–III), and Uncontrolled Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.

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