Critical care medicine
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Critical care medicine · Jul 1989
Effect of lipopolysaccharide on intestinal intramucosal hydrogen ion concentration in pigs: evidence of gut ischemia in a normodynamic model of septic shock.
We tested the hypothesis that lipopolysaccharide (LPS) leads to an imbalance between mesenteric oxygen delivery (DO2) and gut metabolic demand for oxygen, even when cardiac index (CI) is within the normal range. Two groups of pentobarbital-anesthetized pigs (13 to 17 kg) were studied. The first group (LPS; n = 9) was infused over 20 min with Escherichia coli LPS (100 micrograms/kg) and resuscitated with normal saline (1.2 ml/kg.min). ⋯ SMA flow and mesenteric DO2 decreased significantly in the LPS group. Although mesenteric oxygen utilization was well preserved in both groups, ileal intramucosal [H+] was significantly higher in endotoxic animals. These data support the idea that mesenteric oxygen consumption is flow-limited in this clinically relevant porcine model of septic shock.
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Critical care medicine · Jul 1989
Prognostic significance of early clinical manifestations in postanoxic coma: a retrospective study of 58 patients resuscitated after prehospital cardiac arrest.
The neurologic progress for 58 patients resuscitated after prehospital cardiac arrest was analyzed in order to evaluate their prognostic significance. Twenty-four patients were conscious on admission; their inhospital mortality rate was 4%. Thirty-four patients showed alterations of their state of consciousness; their inhospital mortality rate was 53%. ⋯ The time delay before onset of CPR was significantly longer in unconscious patients, but in this group no difference was observed between survivors and nonsurvivors. At discharge, no patient was in a comatose or vegetative state; three patients showed severe neurologic impairment. These data indicate that, in patients with postanoxic coma, early clinical evidence of severe neurologic dysfunction is predictive of neither inhospital death nor neurologic sequelae.
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Critical care medicine · Jul 1989
Hemodynamic effects of intravenous lecithin-based perfluorocarbon emulsions in dogs.
We evaluated and compared the acute hemodynamic effects of perfluorooctylbromide-100% (PFOB), a fluorocarbon emulsified in lecithin without pluronic-F68 (F68), to those of a standard iodinated contrast agent, renografin-76% (R76), and Fluosol-DA 20% (Fluosol), a fluorocarbon emulsified in part by F68. Five open chest dogs were instrumented to evaluate hemodynamic changes after iv injection of PFOB (1 ml.1 g/kg) and R76 (1 ml.0.37 g of iodine/kg). ⋯ R76 caused the known transient effect of hypotension (-15.4 +/- 3.3%) followed by hypertension (6.5 +/- 2.7%) and an increase in aortic flow (29.3 +/- 3.9% at 30 sec). PFOB caused minimal, clinically insignificant decrease in aortic flow (4 +/- 1% at 10 sec).