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Critical care medicine · Nov 2013
Synergistic Deleterious Effect of Hypoxemia and Hypovolemia on Microcirculation in Intestinal Villi.
- Jacques Duranteau, Eric Vicaut, Olivier Huet, Nathalie Baudry, Manuel Lohez, and Marianne Ziol.
- 1Laboratoire de Microcirculation, Energétique, Inflammation, Insuffisance Circulatoire Aigue, Université Paris VII-XI-XIII, Paris, France. 2Service d'Anesthésie-Réanimation Chirurgicale, Hôpital de Bicêtre, Université Paris-Sud, Hôpitaux universitaires Paris-Sud, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Le Kremlin Bicêtre, France. 3BakerIDI Heart and Diabetes Institute, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. 4Service d'Anatomie pathologique, Groupe hospitalier Paris-Seine-Saint Denis, Hopital Jean Verdier, AP-HP, Bondy, France. 5France et Universite Paris 13, Sorbonne Paris Cite, UFR SMBH, Bobigny, France.
- Crit. Care Med.. 2013 Nov 1;41(11):e376-84.
ObjectiveTo investigate the effect of hypoxemia, hemorrhagic shock, and the association of both of these on intestinal microcirculation (microcirculatory perfusion and leukocytes-endothelium interactions in postcapillary venules), as it can be encountered in hemorrhagic shock following trauma.DesignProspective controlled experimental study.SettingUniversity research laboratory.SubjectsForty-eight anesthetized and mechanically ventilated Balb/c mice.InterventionMice were randomly assigned to hypoxemia group in which we decreased inspired oxygen fraction during 60 minutes to reach a PaO2 of 40 mm Hg, hemorrhagic shock group in which animals were exsanguinated to a mean arterial pressure level of 40 mm Hg during 30 minutes, hypoxemia-hemorrhagic shock group in which PaO2 was decreased to 40 mm Hg during 60 minutes with exsanguination from the 30th to the 60th minute to a mean arterial pressure level of 40 mm Hg; or control group.Measurements And Main ResultsHypoxemia decreased RBCs velocity in intestinal villi but did not alter the fraction of perfused villi. Hypoxemia also triggered leukocytes adhesion to the venular endothelium. Hemorrhagic shock not only decreased RBCs velocity in villi but also slightly altered the fraction of perfused villi (94% ± 2% in hemorrhagic shock group vs 100% ± 0% in control group, p < 0.005). Furthermore, hemorrhagic shock triggered leukocytes adhesion to the venular endothelium to the same extent as hypoxemia. When hypoxemia was associated to hemorrhagic shock, it decreased villous RBCs velocity in an additive manner and the fraction of perfused villi dropped in a synergistic manner (69% ± 3% in hypoxemia-hemorrhagic shock group vs 94 ± 2 in hemorrhagic shock group, p < 0.005). The association of hypoxemia and hemorrhagic shock did not further amplify leukocytes adhesion to intestinal venules compared with either hypoxemia or hemorrhagic shock alone.ConclusionsDuring hemorrhagic shock, the occurrence of hypoxemia considerably alters villous intestinal perfusion as it decreases the fraction of perfused villi in a synergistic manner, thereby increasing the risk of villous ischemia. The association of hypoxemia and hemorrhagic shock did not amplify leukocytes adhesion to the endothelium further than either hemorrhagic shock or hypoxemia alone did. As hypoxemia frequently occurs simultaneously with hemorrhagic shock in traumatic conditions, it can worsen gut ischemia leading to the exacerbation of multiple organ failure syndrome.
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