• Crit Care · Apr 2016

    Leakage of albumin in major abdominal surgery.

    • Åke Norberg, Olav Rooyackers, Ralf Segersvärd, and Jan Wernerman.
    • Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, Hälsovägen, SE-141 86, Stockholm, Sweden. ake.norberg@karolinska.se.
    • Crit Care. 2016 Apr 26; 20 (1): 113.

    BackgroundThe time course of plasma albumin concentration (P-alb) and cumulative perioperative albumin shift as a measure of albumin extravasation in major abdominal surgery is not well described. Knowledge of these indices of the vascular barrier and vascular content are important for our understanding of fluid physiology during surgery and anesthesia.MethodsPatients (n = 10) were studied during esophageal or pancreatic surgery. P-alb was repeatedly measured over 72 h, and the mass balance of albumin and hemoglobin were obtained from measures of P-alb, blood hemoglobin and hematocrit.ResultsP-alb decreased rapidly from baseline (32.8 ± 4.8 g/L) until the start of surgical reconstruction (18.7 ± 4.8 g/L; p < 0.001), and was thereafter stable until postoperative day 3. Cumulative perioperative albumin shift increased until 1 h after the end of surgery, when 24 ± 17 g (p < 0.001) had been lost from the circulation.ConclusionsThe rapid fall in P-alb of more than 40 % consistently occurred during the first part of the surgical procedure, but albumin leakage progressed until 1 h after the end of surgery. After the initial drop, P-alb was stable for 72 h.

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