| Literature DB >> 20811874 |
E Christiaan Boerma1, Can Ince.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The clinical use of vasoactive drugs is not only intended to improve systemic hemodynamic variables, but ultimately to attenuate derangements in organ perfusion and oxygenation during shock. This review aims (1) to discuss basic physiology with respect to manipulating vascular tone and its effect on the microcirculation, and (2) to provide an overview of available clinical data on the relation between vasoactive drugs and organ perfusion, with specific attention paid to recent developments that have enabled direct in vivo observation of the microcirculation and concepts that have originated from it.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20811874 PMCID: PMC2981743 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-010-1970-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Summary of techniques for the quantification of (microvascular) organ perfusion and oxygenation
| Technique | Principle | Data expressed as | Area of interest | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonometry | Balloon content (saline: tonometry, air: capnography) equilibrates with mucosal cellular fluid/gas. Content is quantified with classical bloodgas technology (pH, | Intestinal pH or difference between intestinal and arterial ( | Mucosal capillary blood flow | Detects mucosal dysoxia (imbalance between oxygen demand and supply) as a result of inadequate microvascular perfusion. Hypoxic hypoxia is not detected, serosal perfusion can influence measurements. |
| Indocyanine green clearance | Dye dilution method. The flow is related to the quantity of the injected indicator dye divided by the area under the curve of the downstream dye concentration, according to the Stewart-Hamilton equation | l/min | Hepatosplanchnic vascular compartment | Indocyanine green clearance is dependent on overall hepatosplanchnic blood flow and hepatic cellular clearance function (altered in liver failure) |
| Laser-Doppler flowmetry | Shift in frequency between emitted and received signal related to (red) blood cell velocity (Doppler principle); flow = velocity × probe catchment area | m/s (velocity) or l/min (flow) | Catchment volume incorporates arteriolar, capillary and venular blood flow | |
| Spectrophotometry | Light with a specific wavelength is emitted by a spectrometer. Given a specific distance, the solute concentration or color between the spectrometer and the receiving photometer determines the (change in) received light intensity, according to Beer’s law | Optical density units from which hemoglobin saturation (%) is calculated | Catchment area incorporates capillary and venular hemoglobin saturation | Hemoglobin saturation may be normal or elevated under conditions of microvascular heterogeneity in capillary blood flow due to shunting |
| Orthogonal polarization spectral imaging | Direct in vivo video microscopy. Absorbance of green light (540 nm) by hemoglobin projects red blood cells as black dots. Polarization prevents scattering of light | Semi-quantitative: microvascular blood flow index (convective transport) and perfused capillary density (diffusion distance) quantative: functional capillary density (software analysis needed) | Images less than 1 mm2 discriminates between capillaries and venules | Visualization of vessels depends on presence of red blood cells. Enables to visualize distributive changes in blood flow between individual capillaries |
| Sidestream dark field imaging | Direct in vivo video microscopy. Absorbance of green light (540 nm) by hemoglobin projects red blood cells as black dots. Ring of stroboscopic light emitting diodes around the camera prevents scattering of light | Semi-quantitative: microvascular blood flow index (convective transport) and perfused capillary density (diffusion distance). Quantative: functional capillary density (software analysis needed) | Images less than 1 mm2 discriminates between capillaries and venules | Visualization of vessels depends on presence of red blood cells. Enables to visualize distributive changes in blood flow between individual capillaries |
Fig. 1Left panel arteriolar vasodilation increases the opening pressure of the microcirculation as result of a decrease in pressure drop prior to the microvascular compartment. Right panel combined arteriolar and venular increment of vascular tone reduces the net driving pressure over the microvascular compartment (from [17] by permission)
Fig. 2Convective transport of oxygen through the capillaries depends on red blood cell velocity, capillary hematocrit and oxygen saturation. Oxygen transport from the capillary to the cell via diffusion is inversely related to the diffusion distance (D1 and D2) according to Fick’s law
Fig. 3Under experimental conditions with a systemic hematocrit (HA) of 50%, capillary hematocrit (Hcap) ranges from 6.8% under vasoconstriction to 38% under vasodilation. (From [20] by permission)
Adrenergic vasopressors (summary of effects in human studies on microvascular perfusion, oxygenation and organ function)
| Study [ref] | Vasopressor | Setting | Technique(s) | Effects | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Norepinephrine | Septic shock, | SDF-imaging, tonometry, laser-Doppler | No change in sublingual microvascular blood flow, lactate or | Stepwise increase MAP from 65 to 85 mmHg, individual effect baseline-dependent |
| [ | Norepinephrine | Septic shock, | Laser-Doppler, tonometry | No difference in skin capillary blood flow, | Stepwise increase MAP from 65 to 85 mmHg |
| [ | Norepinephrine | Septic shock, | Creatinine clearance | No difference in lactate, urine output or creatinine clearance | Comparison between MAP 65 and 85 mmHg |
| [ | Norepinephrine | Septic shock, | Doppler ultrasonography, creatinine clearance | Decrease in renal resistive index, increase in urine output, no change in creatinine clearance | Effect between MAP 65 and 75, no further change at 85 mmHg |
| [ | Epinephrine | Septic shock, | Tonometry, hepatic vein lactate, ICG clearance | Decrease in mucosal pH and splanchnic blood flow, increase in hepatic vein lactate | Cross-over, in addition to norepinephrine plus dobutamine |
| [ | Phenylephrine | Septic shock, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | No change in splancnic blood flow, | Increment MAP from 65 to 75 mmHg, comparison between norepinephrine and phenylephrine |
| [ | Phenylephrine | Septic shock, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | Decrease in splanchnic blood flow, | Switching from norepinephrine to phenylephrine under steady state MAP at 70 mmHg |
| [ | Phenylephrine | Cardiopulmonary bypass, | SDF-imaging, laser-Doppler flowmetry, spectrophotometry | Decrease in sublingual capillary blood flow together with an increase in microcirculatory hemoglobin oxygen saturation and overall sublingual blood flow, suggesting shunt | Increment MAP from 47 to 68 mmHg under steady state cardiac output |
| [ | Dopamine (high dose) | Septic shock, | Tonometry | Decrease in gastric mucosal pH | Increment MAP from ≤60 to ≥75 mmHg, under norepinephrine intestinal pH decreased |
SDF Sidestream dark field, pCO arterial-to-gastric pCO2 gradient, MAP mean arterial pressure, ICG indocyanine green
Vasopressin and analogues (summary of effects in human studies on microvascular perfusion, oxygenation and organ function)
| Study [ref] | Vasopressor | Setting | Technique(s) | Effects | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | AVP | Vasodilatory shock, | Tonometry | Increase in | Additional to 0.5 mcg/kg/min norepinephrine, MAP ≥70 mmHg; increase in |
| [ | AVP | Vasodilatory shock, | OPS-imaging | No difference in capillary perfusion | Baseline capillary perfusion markedly impaired |
| [ | AVP | Vasodilatory shock, | Tonometry | No change in | In comparison to norepinephrine lower SOFA score, despite higher bilirubin |
| [ | AVP | Septic shock, | Tonometry | Increase in | In addition to norepinephrine or replacement of norepinephrine respectively |
| [ | AVP | Vasodilatory shock, post cardiac surgery, | Tonometry, laser-Doppler flowmetry | Decrease in jejuna mucosal blood flow, increase in | No change in MAP, decrease in cardiac output |
| [ | AVP | Vasodilatory shock, post cardiac surgery, | Renal vein thermodilution, 51Cr-EDTA | Decrease in renal blood flow, increase in glomerular filtration rate, impairment of renal oxygen supply/demand relationship | No change in MAP |
| [ | Terlipressin | Septic shock, | OPS-imaging | Complete shutdown sublingual microcirculatory blood flow, increase in urine output | Rise in MAP from 58 to 105 mmHg |
| [ | Terlipressin | Septic shock, | Tonometry, laser-Doppler flowmetry | Increase of urine output and creatinine clearance, rise in bilirubin, no significant change in |
AVP Argenine vasopressin, OPS orthogonal polarization spectral, pCO arterial-to-gastric pCO2 gradient, MAP mean arterial pressure, EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid
Inotropic agents (summary of effects in human studies on microvascular perfusion, oxygenation and organ function)
| Study [ref] | Inotrope | Setting | Technique(s) | Effects | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Dobutamine | Septic shock, | OPS-imaging | Increase in sublingual capillary perfusion over time | Microcirculatory effects irrespective of systemic hemodynamics |
| [ | Dobutamine | Septic shock, | Tonometry, laser-Doppler flowmetry, ICG clearance | Decrease in | Substantial rise in cardiac output |
| [ | Dopamine (low dose) | Septic shock, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | No change in intestinal pH despite increase in overall splanchnic blood flow | Effect on splanchnic blood flow baseline-dependent |
| [ | Dopexamine | Septic shock, | Tonometry, spectrophotometry | Increase in microvascular hemoglobin saturation, no change in intestinal pH | These combined observations suggest distributive failure |
| [ | Dopexamine | Septic shock, | Laser-Doppler flowmetry | Increase in gastric mucosal blood flow | In addition to norepinephrine and in comparison to epinephrine |
| [ | Dopexamine | Cardiac surgery, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | Increase in splanchnic blood flow and oxygen consumption, no change in intestinal pH | Significant rise in cardiac output |
| [ | Levosimendan | Septic shock, | Tonometry, laser-Doppler flowmetry | Decrease in | In comparison to dobutamine |
| [ | Levosimendan | Abdominal aneurysm repair, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | Overall splanchnic blood flow remained unaltered, | In comparison to placebo during aortic clamping, significantly higher cardiac output |
OPS Orthogonal polarization spectral, pCO arterial-to-gastric pCO2 gradient, ICG indocyanine green
Vasodilators (summary of effects in human studies on microvascular perfusion, oxygenation and organ function)
| Study [ref] | Inotrope | Setting | Technique(s) | Effects | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | Nitroglycerin | Septic shock, | OPS-imaging | Instantaneous increase in sublingual microcirculatory blood flow after a 0.5 mg iv bolus | Open label, after fulfilment of static pressure resuscitation endpoint |
| [ | Nitroglycerin | Septic shock, | SDF-imaging | No difference in sublingual microcirculatory blood flow after 24 h | Placebo controlled double-blind, after fulfilment of dynamic resuscitation endpoints. |
| [ | Nitroglycerin | Cardiogenic shock, | SDF-imaging | Increase in sublingual perfused capillary density | Effect ceased after stop medication |
| [ | Ketanserin | Cardiac surgery, | SDF-imaging | No change in sublingual perfused capillary density and microvascular blood flow | MAP dropped from 86 to 68 mmHg |
| [ | Prostacyclin | Septic shock, | Tonometry | Increase in gastric mucosal pH | Intravenous prostacyclin |
| [ | Prostacyclin | Septic shock, | Tonometry, ICG clearance | Decrease in | Patients with septic shock and pulmonary hypertension, aerosolized prostacyclin; effects in comparison to baseline and inhaled nitric oxyde |
OPS Orthogonal polarization spectral, SDF sidestream dark field, pCO arterial-to-gastric pCO2 gradient, ICG indocyanine green, MAP mean arterial pressure