BACKGROUND: Sympathetic vascular insult and hemodynamic changes represent the most reliable explanation of renal impairment resulting from acute intraabdominal pressure. We evaluated the effects of low-dose dopamine administration during a long-lasting surgical laparoscopic procedure. METHODS: For this study 40, patients submitted to a colorectal laparoscopic procedure with 15 mmHg of intraabdominal pressure were randomly allocated to two groups: 20 receiving 2 mg/kg/min of dopamine and 20 receiving the same perfusion of saline. Hemodynamic parameters, renal function, urinary output, and creatinine clearance, were studied. RESULTS: The hemodynamic parameters were similar in both groups. The urinary output decreased during the intraoperative period only the saline group (p = 0.4). Then 2 h postoperatively, it increased in both groups, and no statistically significant differences were found between the groups. The creatinine clearance decreased in both groups during the intraoperative time, but it was worse in the saline group (-28 +/- 120 vs -194 +/- 106; p = 0.022). During the postoperative period, both groups showed improvement, but in control group the values remained lower than at baseline (p = 0.04), and significantly lower than in the dopamine group (230 +/- 337 vs 100 +/- 192; p = 0.012). CONCLUSIONS: An intrabdominal pressure of 15 mmHg induces a time-limited renal dysfunction, and low doses of dopamine could prevent this undesirable effect.
RCT Entities:
BACKGROUND: Sympathetic vascular insult and hemodynamic changes represent the most reliable explanation of renal impairment resulting from acute intraabdominal pressure. We evaluated the effects of low-dose dopamine administration during a long-lasting surgical laparoscopic procedure. METHODS: For this study 40, patients submitted to a colorectal laparoscopic procedure with 15 mmHg of intraabdominal pressure were randomly allocated to two groups: 20 receiving 2 mg/kg/min of dopamine and 20 receiving the same perfusion of saline. Hemodynamic parameters, renal function, urinary output, and creatinine clearance, were studied. RESULTS: The hemodynamic parameters were similar in both groups. The urinary output decreased during the intraoperative period only the saline group (p = 0.4). Then 2 h postoperatively, it increased in both groups, and no statistically significant differences were found between the groups. The creatinine clearance decreased in both groups during the intraoperative time, but it was worse in the saline group (-28 +/- 120 vs -194 +/- 106; p = 0.022). During the postoperative period, both groups showed improvement, but in control group the values remained lower than at baseline (p = 0.04), and significantly lower than in the dopamine group (230 +/- 337 vs 100 +/- 192; p = 0.012). CONCLUSIONS: An intrabdominal pressure of 15 mmHg induces a time-limited renal dysfunction, and low doses of dopamine could prevent this undesirable effect.
Authors: A M Koivusalo; M Scheinin; I Tikkanen; T Yli-Suomu; S Ristkari; J Laakso; L Lindgren Journal: Acta Anaesthesiol Scand Date: 1998-05 Impact factor: 2.105
Authors: S V Demyttenaere; L S Feldman; S Bergman; S Gholoum; C Moriello; B Unikowsky; S Fraser; F Carli; G M Fried Journal: Surg Endosc Date: 2005-12-09 Impact factor: 4.584
Authors: Chris Westgarth-Taylor; Leonnie de Lijster; Guido van Bogerijen; Alastair J W Millar; Jonathan Karpelowsky Journal: Surg Endosc Date: 2013-04-19 Impact factor: 4.584
Authors: Mathew Zacharias; Mohan Mugawar; G Peter Herbison; Robert J Walker; Karen Hovhannisyan; Pal Sivalingam; Niamh P Conlon Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2013-09-11