Sepsis does not begin with a lab value.
It begins at the cellular level.
A normal lactate does not always mean normal perfusion.
A stable blood pressure does not guarantee oxygen is reaching the cell.
A “not alarming” white count does not erase risk.
Sepsis is a disorder of dysregulated response affecting microcirculation, mitochondrial function, and energy production long before dramatic numbers appear.
If we anchor only to thresholds, we risk missing trajectory.
Lactate is a trend, not reassurance.
Organ dysfunction whispers before it screams.
Oxygen can be present in the bloodstream and still fail at the cellular level.
Early recognition requires deeper thinking.
It requires moving from:
• Threshold thinking → to trajectory thinking
• Comfort → to curiosity
• “It’s normal” → to “What is changing?”

Because sepsis is often missed in the thinking phase — before the lab confirms it.
This month, we look beyond the numbers — and into the physiology that saves lives.