Acute brain injury due to intracerebral haemorrhage secondary to sepsis
AI-generated summary
A 36-year-old woman with intravenous heroin use history presented with depressed consciousness and purpuric rash. Paramedics appropriately administered empiric antibiotics for suspected meningococcal sepsis. Hospital investigation revealed intracerebral haemorrhages and blood cultures grew Staphylococcus aureus sepsis. She underwent neurosurgery for haemorrhage evacuation but had a poor neurological prognosis and died in ICU. The clinical lessons centre on the challenging differential diagnosis of altered consciousness with purpura in a patient with substance use history. Early recognition of sepsis and appropriate empiric antibiotics were initiated correctly. The case highlights that fulminant sepsis with intracranial complications can rapidly progress to fatal outcomes despite appropriate interventions.
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