Abstract

BackgroundIntraosseous cannulation can be life-saving when intravenous access cannot be readily achieved. However, it has been shown that the procedure may cause fat emboli to the lungs and brain. Fat embolization may cause serious respiratory failure and fat embolism syndrome. We investigated whether intraosseous fluid resuscitation in pigs in hemorrhagic shock caused pulmonary or systemic embolization to the heart, brain, or kidneys and if this was enhanced by open chest conditions.MethodsWe induced hemorrhagic shock in anesthetized pigs followed by fluid-resuscitation through bilaterally placed tibial (hind leg) intraosseous cannulas. The fluid-resuscitation was limited to intraosseous or i.v. fluid therapy, and did not involve cardiopulmonary resuscitation or other interventions. A subgroup underwent median sternotomy with pericardiectomy and pleurotomy before hemorrhagic shock was induced. We used invasive hemodynamic and respiratory monitoring including Swan Ganz pulmonary artery catheter and transesophageal echocardiography and obtained biopsies from the lungs, heart, brain, and left kidney postmortem.ResultsAll pigs exposed to intraosseous infusion had pulmonary fat emboli in postmortem biopsies. Additionally, seven of twenty-one pigs had coronary fat emboli. None of the pigs with open chest had fat emboli in postmortem lung, heart, or kidney biopsies. During intraosseous fluid-resuscitation, three pigs developed significant ST-elevations on ECG; all of these animals had coronary fat emboli on postmortem biopsies.ConclusionsSystemic fat embolism occurred in the form of coronary fat emboli in a third of the animals who underwent intraosseous fluid resuscitation. Open chest conditions did not increase the incidence of systemic fat embolization.

Highlights

  • Intraosseous cannulation can be life-saving when intravenous access cannot be readily achieved

  • Design, and setting In this two-center, non-randomized experimental study, we studied whether intraosseous infusion therapy causes systemic fat embolization in a porcine model for hemorrhagic shock and intraosseous fluid resuscitation

  • Infusion fluid or emboli were not detected in the left ventricular outlet tract (LVOT), except in the one animal with patent foramen ovale which was excluded

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Summary

Introduction

Intraosseous cannulation can be life-saving when intravenous access cannot be readily achieved. We investigated whether intraosseous fluid resuscitation in pigs in hemorrhagic shock caused pulmonary or systemic embolization to the heart, brain, or kidneys and if this was enhanced by open chest conditions. The establishment of intraosseous access can be a lifesaving procedure in critically ill patients when venous access cannot be readily achieved by other means [1, 2]. Intraosseous administration of fluids causes fat embolization to the lungs in both clinical case studies and animal studies [3, 7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Only one case report has described systemic fat embolization after intraosseous cannulation [13], and the phenomenon has not been previously studied in animals

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