Abstract

BackgroundSepsis is a fatal systemic inflammatory response syndrome caused by severe infection. The aim of this study was to measure hepatic microcirculation during the sepsis with laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI), as well as investigating the underlying mechanisms. MethodsSepsis was induced by cecal ligation and puncture. Rats were divided into the sham group and sepsis group. The hepatic microcirculation was monitored with LSCI. In addition, hepatic endothelial function (expression of cell adhesion molecules, coagulation and vascular permeability) and neutrophils accumulation in the liver were compared between the two groups. ResultsDuring the sepsis, hepatic microcirculation decreased dramatically (290.3±70.1 LSPU (laser speckle perfusion units) at baseline vs. 230.4±60.7 LSPU at 12h vs. 125.2±25.4 LSPU at 48h, P<0.001). The rats developed hyperbilirubinemia since 6h. In the early phase of sepsis, the accumulation of neutrophils and formation of microthrombus increased rapidly. In the late phase, hepatic neutrophils accumulation was already at its maximum level. Meanwhile, the endothelial coagulation status shifted from procoagulation to anticoagulation. The vascular leakage was involved in the microcirculation dysfunction since 12h after sepsis. ConclusionsHepatic microcirculation dysfunction occurs early during the sepsis and is associated with liver injury. This microcirculation dysfunction is due to neutrophil–endothelium interactions, microthrombus formation and vascular leakage.

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