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Tourniquet‐induced ischemia and reperfusion in subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscle, and calcaneal cancellous bone
Author(s) -
Hanberg Pelle,
Bue Mats,
Kabel Jesper,
Jørgensen Andrea René,
Søballe Kjeld,
Stilling Maiken
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
apmis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.909
H-Index - 88
eISSN - 1600-0463
pISSN - 0903-4641
DOI - 10.1111/apm.13121
Subject(s) - tourniquet , medicine , subcutaneous tissue , skeletal muscle , anesthesia , muscle tissue , ischemia , microdialysis , surgery , central nervous system
This study aimed to evaluated ischemic metabolites in subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscle, and calcaneal cancellous bone before, during, and after tourniquet application in a simultaneous paired comparison of tourniquet‐exposed and non‐tourniquet‐exposed legs. Ten patients scheduled for hallux valgus or hallux rigidus surgery were included. Microdialysis catheters were placed to simultaneously and continuously sample the metabolites glucose, lactate, pyruvate, and glycerol bilaterally for 12 h in subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscle, and calcaneal cancellous bone. A tourniquet was applied on the leg planned for surgery (inflation time: 15 min, mean tourniquet duration time (range): 65 (58;77) min). During tourniquet inflation, a 2‐ to 3‐fold increase of the mean lactate/pyruvate ratio was found for all investigated tissues in the tourniquet‐exposed leg compared with the non‐tourniquet‐exposed leg. The lactate/pyruvate ratio recovery time after tourniquet release was within 30 min for skeletal muscle, 60 min for subcutaneous tissue, and 130 min for calcaneal cancellous bone. Only the tourniquet‐exposed skeletal muscles were found to be ischemic during tourniquet inflation, defined by a significant increase of the lactate/pyruvate ratio exceeding the ischemic cutoff level of 25; however, this level decreased below 25 immediately after tourniquet release. The glycerol ratio increased instantly after inflation in the tourniquet‐exposed leg in skeletal muscle and subcutaneous tissue, and recovered within 60 (skeletal muscle) and 130 min (subcutaneous tissue) after tourniquet release. These findings suggest that applying tourniquet for approximately 1 h results in limited tissue ischemia and cell damage in subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscle, and calcaneal cancellous bone.

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