Abstract

Intestinal ischemia is a common complication with obscure pathophysiology in critically ill patients. Since insufficient delivery of oxygen is discussed, we investigated the influence of oxygen delivery, hemoglobin, arterial oxygen saturation, cardiac index and the systemic vascular resistance index on the development of intestinal ischemia. Furthermore, we evaluated the predictive power of elevated lactate levels for the diagnosis of intestinal ischemia. In a retrospective case-control study data (mean oxygen delivery, minimum oxygen delivery, systemic vascular resistance index) of critical ill patients from 02/2009-07/2017 were analyzed using a proportional hazard model. General model fit and linearity were tested by likelihood ratio tests. The components of oxygen delivery (hemoglobin, arterial oxygen saturation and cardiac index) were individually tested in models. 59 out of 874 patients developed intestinal ischemia. A mean oxygen delivery less than 250ml/min/m2 (LRT vs. null model: p = 0.018; LRT for non-linearity: p = 0.012) as well as a minimum oxygen delivery less than 400ml/min/m2 (LRT vs null model: p = 0.016; LRT for linearity: p = 0.019) were associated with increased risk of the development of intestinal ischemia. We found no significant influence of hemoglobin, arterial oxygen saturation, cardiac index or systemic vascular resistance index. Receiver operating characteristics analysis for elevated lactate levels, pH, CO2 and central venous saturation was poor with an area under the receiver operating characteristic of 0.5324, 0.52, 0.6017 and 0.6786. There was a significant correlation for mean and minimum oxygen delivery with the incidence of intestinal ischemia for values below 250ml/min/m2 respectively 400ml/min/m2. Neither hemoglobin, arterial oxygen saturation, cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance index nor elevated lactate levels could be identified as individual risk factors.

Highlights

  • Intestinal ischemia (II) in critically ill patients is a life-threatening complication, leading to sepsis [1,2,3] caused by bacterial translocation [4,5,6] or direct fecal contamination of the peritoneal cavity

  • We found no significant influence of hemoglobin, arterial oxygen saturation, cardiac index or systemic vascular resistance index

  • Arterial oxygen saturation, cardiac index, systemic vascular resistance index nor elevated lactate levels could be identified as individual risk factors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Intestinal ischemia (II) in critically ill patients is a life-threatening complication, leading to sepsis [1,2,3] caused by bacterial translocation [4,5,6] or direct fecal contamination of the peritoneal cavity. Congestive heart failure, diabetes mellitus, peripheral artery occlusive disease and age older than 60 years are recognized risk factors [7,8,9]. The mortality in these patients is increased [10,11,12] and it is one of the major missed diagnoses in deceased patients treated in intensive care units (ICU), implying an even higher incidence [13,14,15]. We evaluated the predictive power of elevated lactate levels for the diagnosis of intestinal ischemia

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call