Lactic acidosis is associated with multiple organ failure and need for ventilator support in patients with severe hemorrhage from trauma
- PMID: 26815445
- DOI: 10.1007/s00068-013-0285-3
Lactic acidosis is associated with multiple organ failure and need for ventilator support in patients with severe hemorrhage from trauma
Abstract
Purpose: Lactate is a biomarker for hypoperfusion and subsequent resuscitation in trauma. It is also a predictor of mortality, but few studies have correlated lactate levels with relevant morbidities after trauma.
Methods: A retrospective review was performed of severely injured trauma patients entered into the Trauma Registry of the German Society for Trauma Surgery (TR-DGU) between 2002 and 2008. Adults requiring intensive care were categorized into two groups: lactate and no lactate. The lactate group had three subgroups: normal, elevated, and high lactate. Mean multiple organ failure (MOF) rates and composite endpoint of time (days) to complete organ failure resolution (CTCOFR) for 14 and 21 days and ventilator-free days (VFD) were compared, as well as other endpoints.
Results: We analyzed 2,949 patients, of which 1,199 had lactate measurements. The percentage of patients with MOF increased in each higher lactate subgroup (p < 0.001), as did the mean CTCOFR14 and CTCOFR21 scores (p < 0.001 and < 0.001, respectively). Conversely, the mean VFD decreased in each higher lactate subgroup (p < 0.001). Thus, patients in the elevated and high lactate subgroups had greater MOF rates; required more days, on average, to resolve organ failure; and required more days of ventilator support than patients in the normal lactate subgroup.
Conclusion: Elevated blood lactate levels from trauma were closely correlated with worse outcomes. Thus, lactate shows promise as a biomarker for resuscitation as well as a predictor of mortality. Furthermore, this study supports its use in critical care trials as an outcome measure.
Keywords: Hemorrhage; Lactate; Morbidity; Mortality; Multiple organ failure; Ventilator-free days.
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