(no title)
myrloc | 1 year ago
I thought I was coming down with an annual bug (so did the docs). 3 days after going into an urgent care where I was told I was negative for flu and covid, I went to the ER, where they drew blood. All 4 blood cultures returned positive for enterococcus faecalis.
The bacteria is very common in the intestines, but it's not clear (and probably never will be) how it made it into my bloodstream. Their best guess is inflammation in my gut allowing it to "leak" into the blood. This is after CT and ultrasounds of the abdomen.
29 years of no sepsis then.. random sepsis diagnosis!
zeagle|1 year ago
CT has limited ability to pick up GI malignancy that can lead to translocation of bacteria from colon. If you had something like an autoimmune colitis that lead to translocation you would need to get treated and not all have preceding symptoms.
Herodotus38|1 year ago
myrloc|1 year ago
Spooky23|1 year ago
Aurornis|1 year ago
The term for this is “bacterial translocation”. The intestinal barrier isn’t perfect and some level of bacterial translocation from the GI tract to the bloodstream isn’t abnormal by itself. However, some combination of increased intestinal permeability, reduced immune defense, overgrowth of the bacteria in the GI tract, or mutations of the bacteria can lead to systemic infection.
They probably gave you the “inflammation” explanation because it’s more satisfying than “it happens some times and the potential causes are diverse”.
Glad you’re doing better.