| Literature DB >> 26294968 |
Dimitrios Velissaris1, Vasilios Karamouzos1, Nikolaos Ktenopoulos2, Charalampos Pierrakos3, Menelaos Karanikolas4.
Abstract
Introduction. Sepsis and its consequences such as metabolic acidosis are resulting in increased mortality. Although correction of metabolic acidosis with sodium bicarbonate seems a reasonable approach, there is ongoing debate regarding the role of bicarbonates as a therapeutic option. Methods. We conducted a PubMed literature search in order to identify published literature related to the effects of sodium bicarbonate treatment on metabolic acidosis due to sepsis. The search included all articles published in English in the last 35 years. Results. There is ongoing debate regarding the use of bicarbonates for the treatment of acidosis in sepsis, but there is a trend towards not using bicarbonate in sepsis patients with arterial blood gas pH > 7.15. Conclusions. Routine use of bicarbonate for treatment of severe acidemia and lactic acidosis due to sepsis is subject of controversy, and current opinion does not favor routine use of bicarbonates. However, available evidence is inconclusive, and more studies are required to determine the potential benefit, if any, of bicarbonate therapy in the sepsis patient with acidosis.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26294968 PMCID: PMC4534594 DOI: 10.1155/2015/605830
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1305
Clinical studies evaluating bicarbonate use in sepsis patients with acidosis. Studies are listed in chronological order, based on year of publication.
| Reference | Country, year | Study design | Results |
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Cooper et al. [ | British Columbia, Canada, 1990 | Prospective, randomized, blinded, crossover study, 14 patients | Sodium bicarbonate did not improve hemodynamics or the response to catecholamines and caused hypocalcemia and hypercarbia |
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| Mathieu et al. [ | Lille, France, 1991 | Prospective, randomized, blinded, crossover study, 10 patients | Sodium bicarbonate increased arterial and venous pH, serum bicarbonate, and arterial and venous blood pCO2, but hemodynamic responses similar to sodium chloride |
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| Fang et al. [ | Nanjing, China, 2008 | Prospective, randomized trial, 94 patients | 5% sodium bicarbonate for resuscitation in severe sepsis with hypotension improved blood pressure and cardiac output earlier than saline or hypertonic sodium chloride, indicating limited benefit from bicarbonate in sepsis |
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| Noritomi et al. [ | Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2009 | Prospective, observational study, 60 ICU patients with severe sepsis or septic shock | Lactate reduced and metabolic acidosis corrected in survivors, but not in nonsurvivors |
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| El-Sholh et al. [ | New York, USA, 2010 | Retrospective study, 36 patients with septic shock who received bicarbonates versus 36 matched patients who did not | Bicarbonate group had shorter duration of mechanical ventilation but no difference in 28-day mortality |
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| Jung et al. [ | Montpellier, France, 2011 | Prospective multicenter observational study, 200 patients with severe acidosis | Bicarbonate administration in 5–55% of patients, depending on center, not on acidosis mechanism. No association between bicarbonate and outcome |
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| Chen et al. [ | Jiangsu, China, 2013 | Prospective, randomized trial, 65 patients | Patients who received bicarbonate had improved hemodynamics, shorter mechanical ventilation, shorter ICU and hospital stay, and lower mortality |
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| Kim et al. [ | Busan, Korea, 2013 | Retrospective study, 103 patients with lactic acidosis | Bicarbonate use was independent risk factor for increased mortality |
Laboratory studies evaluating bicarbonate administration in sepsis or acidosis. Studies are listed in chronological order, based on year of publication.
| Reference | Country, year | Study design | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garella et al. [ | Providence, RI, USA, 1973 | 156 dogs, low, normal, or high bicarbonate concentration | Preexisting plasma bicarbonate concentration influences the apparent bicarbonate volume of distribution |
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| Arieff et al. [ | San Francisco, USA, 1982 | Dogs with phenformin-induced lactic acidosis | Bicarbonate reduced portal vein blood flow, cardiac output, and pH in liver and erythrocytes |
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| Benjamin et al. [ | New York, USA, 1994 | Experimental hemorrhagic shock in dogs, compared bicarbonate versus hypertonic saline versus Carbicarb | Bicarbonate moderately increased blood pressure, cardiac index, oxygen delivery, and oxygen consumption but not better than hypertonic saline |
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| Goldsmith et al. [ | London, UK, 1997 | Human leukocytes in vitro | Sodium bicarbonate caused intracellular acidification |
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| Levraut et al. [ | Nice, France, 2001 | Human hepatocytes in vitro | Sodium bicarbonate decreases intracellular pH, and intracellular pH changes are linked to pCO2 in surrounding fluid |
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| Nielsen et al. [ | Copenhagen, Denmark, 2002 | 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy in skeletal muscle of healthy subjects | Bicarbonate administration attenuated the reduction of intracellular muscle pH |
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| Valenza et al. [ | Milan, Italy, 2012 | 32 Sprague Dawley rats in four groups | Bicarbonate corrected acidosis in normoxic, normotensive rats, but effects of bicarbonate on pH different in rats receiving transient versus persistent lactic acid infusion |