Abstract

Decreases in gastric mucosal pH (pHi) are associated with splanchnic hypoxia in animals and with increased mortality in patients. In the present study we measured changes in gastric pHi with a tonometer in septic patients after a short-term infusion of dobutamine. These changes were compared with concurrent alterations in systemic O2 consumption (VO2) and arterial lactate. Twenty-one patients admitted sequentially to a medical intensive care unit with sepsis and gastric pHi < 7.32 were prospectively separated into a normal lactate group (< or = 2.2 mM; n = 10) and an elevated lactate group (> 2.2 mM; n = 11). Dobutamine HCl was infused intravenously at 5 micrograms/kg/min for approximately 3 h and then increased to 10 micrograms/kg/min. Measurements were obtained after each increase in the dose of dobutamine. Dobutamine infused at 10 micrograms/kg/min produced increases in O2 transport in both groups (p < 0.05) whereas systemic O2 consumption remained unchanged. These changes were accompanied by decreases in the arterial lactate concentration of the elevated lactate group (p < 0.01). Arterial lactate remained constant in the normal lactate group. Gastric pHi increased in both groups when dobutamine was infused at 5 micrograms/kg/min (p < 0.01), and then again at 10 micrograms/kg/min (p < 0.05). These results imply that regional tissue hypoxia, as characterized by a low gastric pHi, may be present in septic patients with normal arterial lactate concentration. Moreover, a rise in gastric pHi in response to increases in systemic O2 transport may be a better indicator of regional hypoxia in septic patients than related increases in systemic VO2.

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