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. 1987;21(4):271-83.

Use of hypertonic saline in the treatment of hemorrhagic shock

  • PMID: 3581442

Use of hypertonic saline in the treatment of hemorrhagic shock

H Bitterman et al. Circ Shock. 1987.

Abstract

Hypertonic saline (ie, 7.5% NaCl) was injected intravenously (4 ml/kg bolus) to determine its effects in feline and murine models of hemorrhagic shock. Hypertonic NaCl transiently improved mean arterial blood pressure (MABP), superior mesenteric artery blood flow (SMAF), and cardiac output (CO) during the oligemic period. These effects lasted from 15 to 75 min. However, after reinfusion of blood, shocked cats which received 7.5% NaCl during the oligemic period, maintained MABP, SMAF, and CO at significantly higher values compared to cats receiving 0.9% NaCl. The postreinfusion values of these hemodynamic variables in cats given hypertonic NaCl were not statistically different from those of sham-shock cats. Hypertonic NaCl did not attentuate the increase in plasma cathepsin D activity or plasma proteolysis in either cats or rats. Nevertheless, the plasma activity of a myocardial depressant factor (MDF) was significantly lower in shock cats and rats given hypertonic saline compared with the 0.9% NaCl groups (31 +/- 4 vs 54 +/- 7 U/ml, p less than 0.02, in cats; and 27 +/- 2 vs 51 +/- 7 U/ml, p less than 0.02, in rats). The beneficial effects of small-volume resuscitation with 7.5% NaCl during hemorrhagic shock in cats and rats are likely due to the transient hemodynamic improvement during the oligemic period rather than sustained improvement in splanchnic perfusion or in prevention of cellular injury during shock. Our results in two species (eg, cat and rat) suggest that small-volume resuscitation with 7.5% NaCl may be a useful initial treatment of hemorrhagic shock when supplemented by subsequent blood transfusion or perhaps some other appropriate pharmacologic intervention.

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