Conversation: The conversation between human and AI assistant.
[|Human|] My son had aortic valve replaced 3 years ago.about 10 days ago he came down with flu like systems..fever bad backache chills..r Finally took to hospital and the next day he was told that he had bacteria in the blood Has been in hospital since last Saturday..
[|AI|]  Bacterial infection in blood can be treated by the following wain almost every case of sepsis, patients need to be hospitalized, treated with appropriate intravenous antibiotics, and given therapy to support any organ dysfunction. Sepsis can quickly cause organ damage and death; therapy should not be delayed as statistics suggest as high as a 7% mortality increase per hour if antibiotics are delayed in severe sepsis. Most cases of sepsis are treated in an intensive care unit (ICU) of the hospital by critical care medicine specialists, infectious disease specialists, and others as needed. Appropriate antibiotics to treat sepsis are combinations of two or three antibiotics given at the same time; most combinations usually include vancomycin to treat many MRSA infections. Some commonly used antibiotics used ceftriaxone (Rocephin), meropenem (Merged), ceftazidime (Format), cefotaxime (Claghorn), cefepime (Maritime), piperacillin and tazobactam (Syn), ampicillin and sulbactam (Uneasy), imipenem/dilatation (Primarily), levofloxacin (Joaquin), clindamycin (Clean). However, once the infecting organism is isolated, labs can determine which antibiotics are most effective against the organisms, and those antibiotics should be used to treat the patient. In addition to antibiotics, two other major therapeutic interventions, organ-system support and surgery, may be needed. First, if an organ system needs support, the intensive care unit can often provide it (for example, intubation [mechanical ventilation] to support lung function or dialysis to support kidney function) or a central venous catheter and fluid replacement with intravenous fluids and/or antihypertensive medication to raise blood pressure (norepinephrine [Devoted] or phenylephrine [Neo-Synephrine] administered by IV). Secondly, surgery may be needed to Chat Doctor.  Amputation of extremities has been done to save some patients lives. Regards