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. 2012 May;40(5):1443-8.
doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e31823dae59.

Quantitative assessment of the microcirculation in healthy volunteers and in patients with septic shock

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Quantitative assessment of the microcirculation in healthy volunteers and in patients with septic shock

Vanina S Kanoore Edul et al. Crit Care Med. 2012 May.

Abstract

Objective: The microcirculation of septic patients has been characterized only semiquantitatively. Our goal was to characterize the sublingual microcirculation in healthy volunteers and patients with septic shock quantitatively. Our hypotheses were that 1) hyperdynamic blood flow is absent in septic shock; 2) nonsurvivors show more severe alterations than survivors; and 3) quantitative and semiquantitative microcirculatory parameters have a similar performance.

Design: Prospective, observational study.

Setting: Teaching intensive care unit in a university-affiliated hospital.

Subjects: Twenty-five normal volunteers and 25 patients with septic shock.

Interventions: None.

Measurements and main results: The sublingual microcirculation was evaluated by means of sidestream dark field imaging. Semiquantitative and quantitative microcirculatory parameters were determined through the use of applied software. Septic patients showed decreased perfused capillary density (13.2±4.4 mm/mm² vs. 16.6±1.6 mm/mm²), proportion of perfused capillaries (0.78±0.23 vs. 1.00±0.01), microvascular flow index (2.15±0.61 vs. 2.97±0.03), and red blood cell velocity (830±183 µm/sec vs. 1332±187 µm/sec) along with increased heterogeneity flow index (1.64±1.14 vs. 0.25±0.19) compared with controls. No differences were found in total capillary density (16.9±2.2 vs. 16.7±1.6). Only 4% of capillaries analyzed showed red blood cell velocities>75th percentile of the velocities of the normal volunteers. The nonsurvivors exhibited decreased perfused capillary density, proportion of perfused capillaries, and microvascular flow index along with increased heterogeneity flow index compared with the survivors. The correlations between microvascular flow index and proportion of perfused capillaries, total capillary density and number of grid-crossing capillaries, and red blood cell velocities and microvascular flow index gave high R values (0.92, 0.65, and 0.52, respectively; p<.0001 for all).

Conclusions: The main characteristics of sublingual microcirculation in patients with septic shock are hypoperfusion and increased flow heterogeneity. Hyperdynamic microvascular blood flow was not found. Nonsurvivors showed more severe alterations than survivors. Quantitative and semiquantitative microcirculatory variables displayed similar behaviors.

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