From Macrohemodynamic to the Microcirculation
Author(s) -
Abele Donati,
Roberta Domizi,
Elisa Damiani,
Erica Adrario,
P Pelaia,
Can İnce
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
critical care research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.532
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2090-1313
pISSN - 2090-1305
DOI - 10.1155/2013/892710
Subject(s) - medicine , microcirculation , intensive care medicine , hypovolemia , sepsis , cardiology , pathology , surgery
ICU patients need a prompt normalization of macrohemodynamic parameters. Unfortunately, this optimization sometimes does not protect patients from organ failure development. Prevention or treatment of organ failure needs another target to be pursued: the microcirculatory restoration. Microcirculation is the ensemble of vessels of maximum 100 μ m in diameter. Nowadays the Sidestream Dark Field (SDF) imaging technique allows its bedside investigation and a recent round-table conference established the criteria for its evaluation. First, microcirculatory derangements have been studied in sepsis: they are mainly characterized by a reduction of vessel density, an alteration of flow, and a heterogeneous distribution of perfusion. Endothelial malfunction and glycocalyx rupture were proved to be the main reasons for the observed microthrombi, capillary leakage, leukocyte rolling, and rouleaux phenomenon, even if further studies are necessary for a better explanation. Therapeutic approaches targeting microcirculation are under investigation. Microcirculatory alterations have been recently demonstrated in other diseases such as hypovolemia and cardiac failure but this issue still needs to be explored. The aim of this paper is to gather the already known information, focus the reader's attention on the importance of microvascular physiopathology in critical illness, and prompt him to actively participate to achieve a more comprehensive understanding of the issue.
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