1. Microcirculation-guided treatment improves tissue perfusion and hemodynamic coherence in surgical patients with septic shock
- Author
-
Athanasios Chalkias, Eleni Laou, Maria Mermiri, Anastasia Michou, Nicoleta Ntalarizou, Stamatia Koutsona, Georgios Chasiotis, Grigorios Garoufalis, Vasileios Agorogiannis, Aikaterini Kyriakaki, and Nikolaos Papagiannakis
- Subjects
Perfusion ,Microcirculation ,Hemodynamics ,Emergency Medicine ,Humans ,Pilot Projects ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Surgery ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Shock, Septic - Abstract
Severe sepsis and septic shock may impair microcirculatory perfusion and cause organ dysfunction. The aim of this pilot study was to assess a new microcirculation-guided resuscitation strategy in patients with septic shock undergoing emergency abdominal surgery.A microcirculation-guided treatment algorithm was developed and applied intraoperatively following restoration of systemic hemodynamics. Sublingual microcirculation was monitored with Sidestream DarkField (SDF +) imaging technique. The primary objective was to investigate the change in De Backer score, Consensus Proportion of Perfused Vessels (Consensus PPV), and Consensus PPV (small) and its association with venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide difference (v-aPCOThirteen consecutive patients were included in the study. Microcirculation-guided resuscitation resulted in an increase of 0.49 mmThe intraoperative use of microcirculation-guided resuscitation strategy may improve tissue perfusion and hemodynamic coherence in patients with septic shock.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF