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American heart journal · Jan 2004
Microvascular alterations in patients with acute severe heart failure and cardiogenic shock.
- Daniel De Backer, Jacques Creteur, Marc-Jacques Dubois, Yasser Sakr, and Jean-Louis Vincent.
- Department of Intensive Care, Erasme University Hospital, Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium. ddebacke@ulb.ac.be
- Am. Heart J. 2004 Jan 1;147(1):91-9.
BackgroundMicrovascular blood flow alterations may impair tissue oxygenation and may participate in the development of multiple organ failure in patients with severe heart failure. We hypothesized that microvascular blood flow alterations are present in patients with severe heart failure and cardiogenic shock.MethodsWe used an orthogonal polarization spectral imaging technique to investigate the sublingual microcirculation in 40 patients with acute severe heart failure, including 31 patients with cardiogenic shock, and in a control group of 15 patients who were examined the day before cardiac surgery. The effects of topical application of acetylcholine (10-2M) were also tested in 5 patients with cardiogenic shock. Five sublingual areas were recorded, allocated a random number, and later analyzed semiquantitatively. Data were analyzed with non-parametric tests and presented as medians (percentiles 25-75).ResultsThe density of all the vessels was similar in the 3 groups. The proportion of perfused small (<20 microm) vessels was lower in patients with cardiac failure and cardiogenic shock than in control patients (63% [46%-65%] and 49% [38%-64%] vs 92% [90%-93%], P <.001). The perfusion of large vessels was preserved in all groups. The proportion of perfused vessels was higher in patients who survived than in patients who did not survive in all vessels (90% [84%-93%] vs 81% [74%-87%], P <.05) and in small vessels (64% [49%-68%] vs 43% [37%-62%], P <.05). The topical application of acetylcholine totally reversed these alterationsConclusionsMicrovascular blood flow alterations are frequently observed in patients with severe heart failure and are more severe in patients who do not survive.
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