Literature DB >> 22342791

Direct peritoneal resuscitation improves obesity-induced hepatic dysfunction after trauma.

Paul J Matheson1, Glen A Franklin, Ryan T Hurt, Cynthia D Downard, Jason W Smith, Richard N Garrison.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The metabolic syndrome and associated fatty liver disease are thought to contribute to poor outcomes in trauma patients. Experimentally, obesity compromises liver blood flow. We sought to correlate the effect of obesity, injury severity, and liver dysfunction with trauma outcomes. We hypothesized that obesity-related liver dysfunction could be mitigated with the novel technique of adjunctive direct peritoneal resuscitation (DPR). STUDY
DESIGN: This study has clinical and experimental arms. The clinical study was a case-controlled retrospective analysis of ICU trauma patients (n = 72 obese, n = 187 nonobese). The experimental study was a hemorrhagic shock model in obese rats to assess the effect of DPR on liver blood flow, liver function, and inflammatory mediators.
RESULTS: In trauma patients, univariate and multivariate analyses demonstrated increasing mortality (p < 0.05), septic complications (p < 0.05), liver dysfunction (p < 0.001), and renal impairment (p < 0.05) with increasing body mass index and injury severity score. Obesity in rats impairs liver blood flow, liver function, renal function, and inflammation (interleukin [IL]-1β, IL-6, high mobility group protein B1[HMGB-1]). The addition of DPR to shock resuscitation restores liver blood flow, improves organ function, and reverses the systemic proinflammatory response.
CONCLUSIONS: Our clinical review substantiates that obesity worsens trauma outcomes regardless of injury severity. Obesity-related liver and renal dysfunction is aggravated by injury severity. In an obese rat model of resuscitated hemorrhagic shock, the addition of DPR abrogates trauma-induced liver, renal, and inflammatory responses. We conclude that the addition of DPR to the clinical resuscitation regimen will benefit the obese trauma patient. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22342791     DOI: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2011.12.016

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Coll Surg        ISSN: 1072-7515            Impact factor:   6.113


  3 in total

Review 1.  OBESITY AND CRITICAL ILLNESS: INSIGHTS FROM ANIMAL MODELS.

Authors:  Peter N Mittwede; John S Clemmer; Patrick F Bergin; Lusha Xiang
Journal:  Shock       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 3.454

2.  Association Between MC-2 Peptide and Hepatic Perfusion and Liver Injury Following Resuscitated Hemorrhagic Shock.

Authors:  Paul J Matheson; Rafael Fernandez-Botran; Jason W Smith; Samuel A Matheson; Cynthia D Downard; Craig J McClain; Richard N Garrison
Journal:  JAMA Surg       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 14.766

3.  Astragalus membranaceus-Polysaccharides Ameliorates Obesity, Hepatic Steatosis, Neuroinflammation and Cognition Impairment without Affecting Amyloid Deposition in Metabolically Stressed APPswe/PS1dE9 Mice.

Authors:  Yung-Cheng Huang; Huey-Jen Tsay; Mei-Kuang Lu; Chien-Hung Lin; Chih-Wen Yeh; Hui-Kang Liu; Young-Ji Shiao
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2017-12-18       Impact factor: 5.923

  3 in total

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