| Literature DB >> 29616230 |
Jessica Noel-Morgan1, William W Muir2,3.
Abstract
Although the utility and benefits of anesthesia and analgesia are irrefutable, their practice is not void of risks. Almost all drugs that produce anesthesia endanger cardiovascular stability by producing dose-dependent impairment of cardiac function, vascular reactivity, and compensatory autoregulatory responses. Whereas anesthesia-related depression of cardiac performance and arterial vasodilation are well recognized adverse effects contributing to anesthetic risk, far less emphasis has been placed on effects impacting venous physiology and venous return. The venous circulation, containing about 65-70% of the total blood volume, is a pivotal contributor to stroke volume and cardiac output. Vasodilation, particularly venodilation, is the primary cause of relative hypovolemia produced by anesthetic drugs and is often associated with increased venous compliance, decreased venous return, and reduced response to vasoactive substances. Depending on factors such as patient status and monitoring, a state of relative hypovolemia may remain clinically undetected, with impending consequences owing to impaired oxygen delivery and tissue perfusion. Concurrent processes related to comorbidities, hypothermia, inflammation, trauma, sepsis, or other causes of hemodynamic or metabolic compromise, may further exacerbate the condition. Despite scientific and technological advances, clinical monitoring and treatment of relative hypovolemia still pose relevant challenges to the anesthesiologist. This short perspective seeks to define relative hypovolemia, describe the venous system's role in supporting normal cardiovascular function, characterize effects of anesthetic drugs on venous physiology, and address current considerations and challenges for monitoring and treatment of relative hypovolemia, with focus on insights for future therapies.Entities:
Keywords: anesthesia; distributive shock; dynamic index; fluid therapy; functional hemodynamics; mean circulatory filling pressure; preload responsiveness; relative hypovolemia
Year: 2018 PMID: 29616230 PMCID: PMC5864866 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2018.00053
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Blood is unevenly distributed throughout the systemic circulation. The large and small veins contain approximately 70% of the blood volume. Arterial pressure (P) is determined by blood flow (Q) and systemic vascular resistance (R); MSP, mean systemic pressure; RA, right atrium.
Figure 2The total blood volume within the vasculature can be divided into two components: stressed circulating blood volume (Vs: approximately 30% of the blood volume) and unstressed intravascular volume (Vus: approximately 70% of the blood volume). The Vs is hemodynamically active (i.e., effective circulating blood volume) and is the principal determinant of the mean systemic pressure, a primary determinant of venous return. The Vus is the volume of blood required to fill the vascular space without increasing blood pressure. A portion of the Vus (up to 15–20 mL/kg; shaded area between the dashed horizontal lines) serves as a blood reservoir and can be recruited to augment the Vs during times of stress or replenish the Vs during hypovolemia. The wavy white line surrounding the inner circle (i.e., volume) suggests that the volume contained therein can become smaller or larger depending upon changes in vasomotor tone.
Figure 3Schematic representation of total blood volume within the vasculature. Normovolemia: blood volume and vascular capacity are normal. Absolute hypovolemia: blood volume is decreased relative to normal vascular capacity (e.g., hemorrhage). Absolute hypovolemia is either uncontrolled (volume loss continues) or controlled (volume loss has been stopped). Relative hypovolemia: blood volume is normal, increased or decreased, but vascular capacity is increased (e.g., anesthetic overdose; sepsis). Absolute hypovolemia is treated with fluids (e.g., crystalloids; blood). Relative hypovolemia is treated primarily with fluids and vasopressors. Vs, stressed circulating blood volume; Vus, unstressed intravascular volume.
General and cellular mechanisms responsible for anesthesia-associated relative hypovolemia.
| Decreased central sympathetic output |
| Decreased cardiovascular reflex responses |
| Decreased baroreceptor reflex activity |
| Decreased VSM contractile response or sensitivity to: |
| Neurohumoral and adrenoceptor agonists (e.g., norepinephrine) |
| Depressed mechanisms regulating VSM cytosolic Ca2+ |
| Reduced VSM intracellular Ca2+ concentration |
| Reduced VSM L-type calcium channel ion transport |
| Reduced VSM myofilament sensitivity to calcium |
| Activation of K+ATP channels |
VSM, vascular smooth muscle; ATP, adenosine triphosphate.
Pharmacologic effects of clinically relevant doses of commonly administered anesthetic drugs.
| Drug | HR | Arterial blood pressure | CO | Cardiac contractile force | MSP or MCFP | Vasomotor tone | Baroreceptor reflex activity | Sympathetic nerve activity | Splanchnic venous capacitance | Venous return |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhalant anesthetic | ↑↓± | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↓ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↓↓ | ↑↑ | ↓↓ |
| Injectable hypnotic | ||||||||||
| Disociative | ||||||||||
| Opioid | ||||||||||
| Alpha-2 agonist | ↓↓ | ↑→↓ | ↓↓ | --↓ | ↑→↓ | ↑→↓ | --↓ | -- | ↓→↑ | ↑→↓ |
| Benzodiazepine | ||||||||||
| Phenothiazine | ||||||||||
| Local anesthetics | ||||||||||
.
HR, heart rate; CO, cardiac output.
Factors potentially interfering with PPV and SVV.
| Spontaneous breathing |
| Cardiac arrhythmias |
| Tidal volume (Vt, insufficient, excessive) |
| Elevated positive end-expiratory pressure |
| Inspiratory to expiratory ratio |
| Heart rate to respiratory rate ratio |
| Lung compliance |
| Chest wall compliance (including open chest) |
| Increased right ventricular afterload |
| Increased intraabdominal pressure |
| Right and/or left ventricular failure |
| Increased vascular compliance |
| Changes in vascular tone |
.
PPV, pulse pressure variation; SVV, stroke volume variation.