• Swiss medical weekly · Sep 1998

    Review

    Myocardial dysfunction in sepsis: clinical and experimental investigations.

    • A F Suffredini.
    • Critical Care Medicine Department, Warren G. Magnuson Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892-1662, USA. anthony_suffredini@nih.gov
    • Swiss Med Wkly. 1998 Sep 26; 128 (39): 1444-52.

    ObjectiveTo review the clinical manifestations and mechanisms of cardiac dysfunction in septic shock.MethodsLiterature review of selected clinical studies and animal models.ResultsDepressed myocardial contractile function is a common consequence of severe infections. Bacterial factors, in conjunction with host inflammatory mediators, produce a profile of reversible cardiac dysfunction manifested by a decrease in ventricular ejection fraction, ventricular dilatation, and increased cardiac output. Global ischemia is not the major mechanism that mediates cardiac dysfunction during sepsis. Inflammatory mediators contribute to myocardial dysfunction by damaging the coronary microcirculation and contributing to myocardial edema and cardiocyte damage. However, trials of anti-inflammatory agents have not prevented or increased the rate of reversal of septic shock or improved survival. The link between nitric oxide and clinical myocardial depression remains unclear, as nonselective nitric oxide synthase inhibition does not block the development of ventricular dysfunction.ConclusionsSerious bacterial infections result in inflammatory injury to the heart manifested by a common profile of cardiac dysfunction. Therapy remains limited to treatment of the infection with antibiotics and supportive care, with fluid resuscitation and selective use of inotropes and vasopressors. Experimental models suggest that new anti-inflammatory strategies (e.g. tyrosine kinase inhibitors) may offer some advantages over those that target a single mediator; these agents remain to be clinically evaluated.

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