Current opinion in critical care
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Curr Opin Crit Care · Jun 2020
ReviewAutomated quantification of tissue red blood cell perfusion as a new resuscitation target.
Identification of insufficient tissue perfusion is fundamental to recognizing circulatory shock in critically ill patients, and the primary target to restore adequate oxygen delivery. However, the concept of tissue perfusion remains ill-defined and out-of-reach for clinicians as point-of-care resuscitation target. Even though handheld vital microscopy (HVM) provides the technical prerequisites to collect information on tissue perfusion in the sublingual microcirculation, challenges in image analysis prevent quantification of tissue perfusion and manual analysis steps prohibit point-of-care application. The present review aims to discuss recent advances in algorithm-based HVM analysis and the physiological basis of tissue perfusion-based resuscitation parameters. ⋯ tRBCp as measured using algorithm-based HVM analysis with an automated software called MicroTools, represents a promising candidate to assess microcirculatory delivery of oxygen for microcirculation-based resuscitation in critically ill patients at the point-of-care.
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We will highlight the role of ventriculoarterial coupling in the pathophysiology of sepsis and how to assess it. ⋯ Ventriculoarterial coupling is quantified as the ratio of Ea to Ees. The efficiency of the cardiovascular function is optimal when Ea/Ees is near one. When the hydraulic load of the arterial system is excessive either from increased vasomotor tone, decreased LV contractility or both, Ea/Ees becomes greater than 1 (i.e. ventriculoarterial decoupling), and cardiac efficiency decreases leading to heart failure, loss of volume responsiveness, and if sustained, increased mortality. Noninvasive echocardiographic techniques when linked with arterial pressure monitoring allow for the bedside estimates of both Ea and Ees. Studies using this approach have documented the key role ventriculoarterial coupling has defining initial cardiovascular state, response to therapy and outcome from critical illness. Sequential monitoring of ventriculoarterial coupling at the bedside offers a unique opportunity to assess relevant cardiovascular determinants in septic patients requiring resuscitation.
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The current review will give an overview of different possibilities to monitor quality of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) from a physiologic and a process point of view and how these two approaches can/should overlap. ⋯ To perform high-quality CPR, at first, one should optimize rate, depth and pause duration supported by process monitoring tools. Second, the evolving technological evolution gives opportunities to measure physiologic parameters in real-time which will open the way for patient-tailored CPR. The role of ultrasound, cerebral saturation and end-tidal CO2 in measuring the quality of CPR needs to be further investigated as well as the possible ways of influencing these measured parameters to improve neurological outcome and survival.
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To address the impact of therapeutic hypothermia induced already during cardiopulmonary resuscitation (i.e. intra-arrest cooling) and its association with neurologic functional outcome. ⋯ Therapeutic intra-arrest hypothermia can be initiated safely at the scene of the arrest using transnasal evaporative cooling. The potential beneficial effect of intra-arrest cooling on neurologic recovery in patients with initial shockable rhythms should be explored further.