The severe sepsis (SS) and toxic shock (TS) are both frequent and severe complications of infectious diseases. They are one of the top ten causes of death in industrialized countries. But an eventual protective role of beta-blockers (anti-hypertensive drug) in their occurrence on a community infection has never been studied. The objective of this study is to evaluate this role.
The severe sepsis (SS) and toxic shock (TS) are both frequent and severe complications of infectious diseases. They are one of the top ten causes of death in industrialized countries. The adrenergic system is heavily involved in this pathological/physiological context. If the effect of various therapeutic strategies allowing the care of the SS/TS was widely estimated, the impact, positive or negative, therapeutic prescribed in the long term or more punctually - but be that as it may before the arisen of the sepsis - on the evolution of a community acute infectious pathology towards the SS/TS, had only little studied. The main objective of this study is to estimate the possible protective role of a long-term prescription of a beta-blocker on the arisen of the SS/TS in patients having an acute infectious pathology of community origin. The secondary objective will be to estimate, at the patients having developed a SS/TS, the impact of this long-term prescription of beta-blockers on the mortality in intensive care unit (ICU).
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
2,444
Rennes University Hospital (Pontchaillou)
Rennes, Ille-et-Vilaine, France
Brest University Hospital
Brest, France
Clermont-Ferrand University Hospital
Clermont-Ferrand, France
Groupe hospitalier Raymond Poincaré, AP-HP
The primary outcome is the occurrence of severe sepsis, moving toward or away from septic shock.
From the date of randomization until the date of first documented assessed severe sepsis (moving toward or away from septic shock) up to the end of hospitalisation.
Time frame: Participants will be followed for the duration of hospital stay, an expected average of 4 weeks
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