Evolution of peripheral vs metabolic perfusion parameters during septic shock resuscitation. A clinical-physiologic study
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Date
2012
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
Abstract
Purpose: Perfusion assessment during septic shock resuscitation is difficult and usually complex determinations. Capillary refill time (CRT) and central-to-toe temperature difference (Tc-toe) have been proposed as objective reproducible parameters to evaluate peripheral perfusion. The comparative evolution of peripheral vs metabolic perfusion parameters in septic shock resuscitation has not been studied. We conducted a prospective observational clinical-physiologic study to address this subject.
Methods: Patients with sepsis-related circulatory dysfunction were resuscitated according to a standard local algorithm. Perfusion assessment included serial determinations of metabolic (central venous O-2 saturation [ScvO(2)] and central venous to arterial PCO2 gradient [P(cv-a)CO2]) and peripheral perfusion parameters (CRT and Tc-toe, among others). Successful resuscitation was defined as a normal plasma lactate at 24 hours.
Results: Forty-one patients were included. The presence of normal values for both CRT and Tc-toe considered together at 6 hours was independently associated with a successful resuscitation (P = .02), as compared with the behavior of metabolic parameters. Capillary refill time was the first parameter to be significantly normalized.
Conclusion: Early recovery of peripheral perfusion anticipates a successful resuscitation compared with traditional metabolic parameters in septic shock patients. Our findings support the inclusion of serial peripheral perfusion assessment in multimodal monitoring strategies for septic shock resuscitation. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Methods: Patients with sepsis-related circulatory dysfunction were resuscitated according to a standard local algorithm. Perfusion assessment included serial determinations of metabolic (central venous O-2 saturation [ScvO(2)] and central venous to arterial PCO2 gradient [P(cv-a)CO2]) and peripheral perfusion parameters (CRT and Tc-toe, among others). Successful resuscitation was defined as a normal plasma lactate at 24 hours.
Results: Forty-one patients were included. The presence of normal values for both CRT and Tc-toe considered together at 6 hours was independently associated with a successful resuscitation (P = .02), as compared with the behavior of metabolic parameters. Capillary refill time was the first parameter to be significantly normalized.
Conclusion: Early recovery of peripheral perfusion anticipates a successful resuscitation compared with traditional metabolic parameters in septic shock patients. Our findings support the inclusion of serial peripheral perfusion assessment in multimodal monitoring strategies for septic shock resuscitation. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Peripheral perfusion, Septic shock, Lactate, Resuscitation, GOAL-DIRECTED THERAPY, VENOUS OXYGEN-SATURATION, INTENSIVE-CARE-UNIT, SEVERE SEPSIS, SUBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT, MANAGEMENT, HYPOPERFUSION, TEMPERATURE, MULTICENTER, SURVIVAL