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Vasopressin decreases intestinal mucosal perfusion: a clinical study on cardiac surgery patients in vasodilatory shock
Author(s) -
NYGREN A.,
THORÉN A.,
RICKSTEN S.E.
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
acta anaesthesiologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.738
H-Index - 107
eISSN - 1399-6576
pISSN - 0001-5172
DOI - 10.1111/j.1399-6576.2008.01900.x
Subject(s) - medicine , vasopressin , septic shock , cardiac index , perfusion , anesthesia , cardiac output , mean arterial pressure , norepinephrine , shock (circulatory) , vascular resistance , hemodynamics , cardiology , blood pressure , sepsis , heart rate , dopamine
Background: Low to moderate doses of vasopressin have been used in the treatment of cathecholamine‐dependent vasodilatory shock in sepsis or after cardiac surgery. We evaluated the effects of vasopressin on jejunal mucosal perfusion, gastric‐arterial p CO 2 gradient and the global splanchnic oxygen demand/supply relationship in patients with vasodilatory shock after cardiac surgery. Methods: Eight mechanically ventilated patients, dependent on norepinephrine to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) ≥60 mmHg because of septic/post‐cardiotomy vasodilatory shock and multiple organ failure after cardiac surgery, were included. Vasopressin was sequentially infused at 1.2, 2.4 and 4.8 U/h for 30‐min periods. Norepinephrine was simultaneously decreased to maintain MAP at 75 mmHg. At each infusion rate of vasopressin, data on systemic hemodynamics, jejunal mucosal perfusion, jejunal mucosal hematocrit and red blood cell velocity (laser Doppler flowmetry) as well as gastric‐arterial p CO 2 gradient (gastric tonometry) and splanchnic oxygen and lactate extraction (hepatic vein catheter) were obtained. Results: The cardiac index, stroke volume index and systemic oxygen delivery decreased and systemic vascular resistance and systemic oxygen extraction increased significantly, while the heart rate or global oxygen consumption did not change with increasing vasopressin dose. Jejunal mucosal perfusion decreased and the arterial‐gastric‐mucosal p CO 2 gradient increased, while splanchnic oxygen or lactate extraction or mixed venous–hepatic venous oxygen saturation gradient were not affected by increasing infusion rates of vasopressin. Conclusions: Infusion of low to moderate doses of vasopressin in patients with norepinephrine‐dependent vasodilatory shock after cardiac surgery induces an intestinal and gastric mucosal vasoconstriction.

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