Literature DB >> 12151938

Hydroxyethyl starch (130 kD), but not crystalloid volume support, improves microcirculation during normotensive endotoxemia.

Johannes N Hoffmann1, Brigitte Vollmar, Matthias W Laschke, Dietrich Inthorn, Friedrich W Schildberg, Michael D Menger.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Increased leukocyte-endothelial cell interaction (LE) and deterioration of capillary perfusion represent key mechanisms of septic organ dysfunction. The type of volume support, however, which may be used during septic disorders, remains controversial. Using intravital microscopy, the authors studied the effect of different regimens of clinically relevant volume support on endotoxin-induced microcirculatory disorders, including the synthetic colloid hydroxyethyl starch (HES, 130 kD) and a crystalloid regimen with isotonic saline solution (NaCl).
METHODS: In Syrian Golden hamsters, normotensive endotoxemia was induced by intravenous application of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 2 mg/kg). The microcirculation was analyzed in striated muscle of skinfold preparations. HES 130 kD (Voluven(R), 16 ml/kg, n = 7) or isotonic saline (NaCl, 66 ml/kg, n = 6) were infused 3 h after LPS exposure over a 1-h period (posttreatment mode). Animals receiving LPS without volume therapy served as control subjects (n = 8, control). LE, functional capillary density (FCD), and macromolecular leakage were repeatedly analyzed in the awake animals during a 24-h period using intravital fluorescence microscopy.
RESULTS: HES 130 kD significantly reduced LPS-induced arteriolar and venular leukocyte adherence (P < 0.05), whereas NaCl resuscitation had no effect when compared with nontreated control animals. The LPS-induced decrease in FCD and increase in macromolecular leakage were also significantly attenuated by HES 130 kD but not by NaCl. Improvement of LPS-induced microcirculatory disorders by HES was unlikely the result of macro- and microhemodynamic changes because arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and venular wall shear rate did not differ between HES- and NaCl-treated animals.
CONCLUSIONS: Thus, our study provides microhemodynamic and cellular mechanisms of HES 130 kD-mediated protection on microcirculation during endotoxemia, even when used in a clinically relevant posttreatment mode during normotensive conditions.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12151938     DOI: 10.1097/00000542-200208000-00025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anesthesiology        ISSN: 0003-3022            Impact factor:   7.892


  26 in total

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Review 6.  [Microcirculatory monitoring of sepsis].

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