Toxemia

Toxemia Toxemia refers to bacterial toxins that enter the blood circulation from a locally infected lesion, producing systemic persistent high fever, accompanied by a large amount of sweating, a weak pulse, or shock. Bacterial toxin enters the blood circulation from the local infection lesion, and produces systemic persistent high fever, accompanied by a large amount of sweating, weak pulse and shock. Because bacteriotoxin can directly damage blood cells in the blood, anemia often occurs. No bacteria were found in blood culture. It is worth paying special attention to that although serious injuries, vascular embolism, intestinal obstruction and other diseases, although there is no bacterial infection, toxins produced by large-scale tissue destruction can also cause toxemia. Toxemia Toxemia is also known as "multiple abscesses". In the past, some people called it "septic sepsis", which is one of the more severe systemic purulent infections. Large groups of bacteria gather together to form bacterial emboli. When bacterial emboli invade the human blood circulation intermittently and stay somewhere in the body, causing a series of symptoms, it is called sepsis. The most common pathogenic bacteria are Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis. The clinically prominent manifestation is the formation of multiple abscesses.

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