Literature DB >> 10912865

Hepatic blood flow and oxygen consumption after burn and sepsis.

T Tadros1, D L Traber, D N Herndon.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Alteration in the hepatic circulation after burn and in sepsis seems to be an essential component in the development of multiple organ failure.
METHODS: Female pigs (n = 12, 20-25 kg) were instrumented with ultrasonic flow probes on the portal vein and the common hepatic artery. Catheters were inserted in the superior mesenteric and left hepatic veins. After 5 days, all animals were anesthetized and six of them received 40% total body surface area third-degree burn. A total of 100 microg/kg Escherichia coli LPS was intravenously administered at 18 hours after burn. All animals were studied for 42 hours.
RESULTS: Thermal injury resulted in a 48% decrease in hepatic arterial blood flow despite maintenance of normal cardiac output, resulting in a fall in hepatic oxygen delivery rate. Portal venous blood flow showed a 32% increase at 4 hours after burn. Post-LPS portal blood flow was significantly reduced for a period of 8 hours (51% of baseline (bl), p < 0.05 analysis of variance [ANOVA]). The hepatic arterial blood supply was also significantly reduced (12-67% of bl, p < 0.05 ANOVA) during the first 4 hours after LPS, indicating loss of the hepatic arterial response. The following 12 hours, a hepatic reperfusion phase was observed with an elevation of the hepatic arterial blood flow to 152% of bl (p < 0.05 ANOVA). Postburn endotoxemia resulted in a significant decrease of hepatic oxygen delivery (88%) and hepatic oxygen consumption (79%). Although the burn injury did not affect the portal venous pressure, postburn endotoxemia caused a significant portal hypertension during a period of 8 hours (225% of bl, p < 0.05 ANOVA).
CONCLUSION: Postburn sepsis amplifies the selective vasconstrictive impact of thermal injury on hepatic arterial blood flow, yielding a pronounced ischemia/ reperfusion injury, associated with a critical reduction of hepatic oxygen delivery and consumption. A postburn septic challenge induces portal hypertension, which may account for previously documented gut barrier dysfunction.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10912865     DOI: 10.1097/00005373-200007000-00016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  7 in total

1.  Opposite effects of prostacyclin on hepatic blood flow and oxygen consumption after burn and sepsis.

Authors:  Tamer Tadros; Daniel L Traber; David N Herndon
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Authors:  Yoshitaka Inoue; Yong-Ming Yu; Tomohiro Kurihara; Aleksandr Vasilyev; Amir Ibrahim; Rahmi Oklu; Gaofeng Zhao; Anil V Nair; Dennis Brown; Alan J Fischman; Ronald G Tompkins; Daniel Irimia
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7.  Burn resuscitation strategy influences the gut microbiota-liver axis in swine.

Authors:  Wayne T Muraoka; Jose C Granados; Belinda I Gomez; Susannah E Nicholson; Kevin K Chung; Jeffrey W Shupp; James A Bynum; Michael A Dubick; David M Burmeister
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-09-24       Impact factor: 4.996

  7 in total

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