Quick answer

What is sepsis?

Sepsis is when the body's response to infection injures its own tissues and organs — a medical emergency. Symptoms include confusion, extreme breathlessness, not passing urine, mottled skin, fever or low temperature, and feeling deathly ill. Any infection can trigger it — urine, chest, skin, abdomen. Phone 999 or go to A&E if you suspect sepsis — do not wait. Early antibiotics and fluids in hospital save lives — hours matter.

Sepsis — when infection becomes emergency

Sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction caused by dysregulated host response to infectionimmune cascade damages blood vessels, orgers fail.

Septic shocksepsis + persistent hypotension despite fluids — ~40% mortality.

UK ~245,000 cases yearly48,000 deathsearly treatment saves lives.

Public recognition — UK Sepsis Trust

Adults — seek 999 if ANY with suspected infection:

  • Slurred speech or confusion
  • Extreme shivering or muscle ache
  • Passing no urine (day)
  • Severe breathlessness
  • I feel like I might die
  • Skin mottled or discoloured

“Just ask: could it be sepsis?”

Children (under 5) — additional

  • breathing very fast
  • fit or convulsion
  • looks mottled, bluish, pale
  • rash not fading
  • lethargic or difficult to wake
  • feels abnormally cold

Common infection sources

Who is vulnerable

  • >75, <1 year
  • chemotherapy, steroids, immunosuppression
  • diabetes
  • recent surgery
  • indwelling urinary catheter

Hospital management

Sepsis Six bundle (within 1 hour):

  1. High-flow oxygen
  2. Blood cultures
  3. IV antibiotics
  4. IV fluid bolus
  5. Measure lactate
  6. Monitor urine outputcatheter if needed

Source controlsurgery, drainage

ICUnoradrenaline, ventilation, RRT

After sepsis

Post-sepsis syndrome:

  • fatigue, weakness, anxiety, cognitive fogmonths

Rehabilitationphysio, psychology

vs flu

Flu miserablesepsis catastrophicconfusion + infection + collapsenot “wait it out”.

Antibiotics at home for UTI but getting worse day 3same-day reviewnot repeat script blind.

Sepsis kills in hours999 beats politenesssay sepsis aloud to dispatcher.

Common questions

What are the signs of sepsis?
Slurred speech or confusion, extreme shivering or muscle pain, passing no urine all day, severe breathlessness, feels like dying, skin mottled or discoloured. In children — breathing very fast, fits, pale skin, rash not fading, lethargy, abnormally cold touch. Any combination with infection — emergency.
What is the difference between sepsis and septicaemia?
Sepsis is life-threatening organ dysfunction from dysregulated host response to infection. Septicaemia (blood poisoning) implies bacteria in bloodstream — can cause sepsis but sepsis can occur without positive blood cultures. Both need urgent hospital treatment.
What causes sepsis?
Any infection — pneumonia, urinary tract infection, cellulitis, appendicitis, meningitis, abdominal infection. Bacteria most common; viruses and fungi also. Surgery, indwelling lines, and catheters increase risk. Body's immune overreaction damages vessels and organs.
How is sepsis treated?
Emergency hospital — IV antibiotics within 1 hour of recognition, IV fluid resuscitation, oxygen, monitor urine output, treat source (drain abscess, remove infected line). ICU if shock — vasopressors, organ support. Blood cultures before antibiotics when possible without delay.
Can sepsis be prevented?
Prompt treatment of infections, hand hygiene, vaccination (flu, pneumococcal, meningitis), care of wounds and diabetes, seek help early when unwell. Cannot prevent all cases — early recognition key to survival.

Sources