Rangel-Frausto M S
Hospital Epidemiology Research Unit, National Medical Center, Mexico City, Mexico.
Infect Dis Clin North Am. 1999 Jun;13(2):299-312, vii. doi: 10.1016/s0891-5520(05)70076-3.
As a result of better understanding of pathogenesis, new definitions of sepsis have been proposed, and the complexity of this syndrome is clearer. Population-based studies of bloodstream infections--what now is called sepsis--have helped us to understand the natural history of this very frequent problem. The mortality and morbidity of each of the systemic inflammatory response syndrome stages have been described; our ability to better understand and predict these stages will help us to make better therapeutic decisions.