Abstract

BackgroundIntensive care of severe trauma patients focuses on the treatment of haemorrhagic shock. Tissues should be perfused sufficiently with blood and with sufficient oxygen content to ensure adequate tissue oxygen delivery. Tissue metabolism can be monitored by microdialysis, and the lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) may be used as a tissue ischemia marker. The aim of this study was to determine the adequate cardiac output and haemoglobin levels that avoid tissue ischemia.MethodsAdult patients with serious traumatic haemorrhagic shock were enrolled in this prospective observational study. The primary observed parameters included haemoglobin, cardiac output, central venous saturation, arterial lactate and the tissue lactate/pyruvate ratio.ResultsForty-eight patients were analysed. The average age of the patients was 39.8 ± 16.7, and the average ISS was 43.4 ± 12.2. Hb < 70 g/l was associated with pathologic arterial lactate, ScvO2 and LPR. Tissue ischemia (i.e., LPR over 25) developed when CI ≤ 3.2 l/min/m2 and Hb between 70 and 90 g/l were observed. Severe tissue ischemia events were recorded when the Hb dropped below 70 g/l and CI was 3.2-4.8 l/min/m2. CI ≥ 4.8 l/min/m2 was not found to be connected with tissue ischemia, even when Hb ≤ 70 g/l.ConclusionLPR could be a useful marker to manage traumatic haemorrhagic shock therapies. In initial traumatic haemorrhagic shock treatments, it may be better to maintain CI ≥ 3.2 l/min/m2 and Hb ≥ 70 g/l to avoid tissue ischemia. LPR could also be a useful transfusion trigger when it may demonstrate ischemia onset due to low local DO2 and early reveal low/no tissue perfusion.

Highlights

  • Intensive care of severe trauma patients focuses on the treatment of haemorrhagic shock

  • Tissues should be perfused with sufficient blood and oxygen content to ensure adequate tissue oxygen delivery; tissue requirements could differ from the global Oxygen delivery (DO2) value

  • The authors observed an association between lactate/pyruvate ratio (LPR) on haemoglobin, cardiac output, Central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) and arterial lactate levels in the 48 patients

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Summary

Introduction

Intensive care of severe trauma patients focuses on the treatment of haemorrhagic shock. Tissues should be perfused sufficiently with blood and with sufficient oxygen content to ensure adequate tissue oxygen delivery. The aim of this study was to determine the adequate cardiac output and haemoglobin levels that avoid tissue ischemia. Shock is primarily a microcirculatory disorder, in which the oxygen supplied to tissues does not meet their metabolic demand, causing tissue ischemia. Manifest and occult shock is the result of decreased oxygen delivery due to low cardiac output and/or low oxygen content to tissues. To avoid tissue ischemia and microcirculatory dysfunction, shock treatments must be effective, quick and as aggressive as possible to provide sufficient oxygen to distressed tissues. Tissues should be perfused with sufficient blood and oxygen content to ensure adequate tissue oxygen delivery; tissue requirements could differ from the global DO2 value. Tissue ischemia is poorly assessed by commonly used perfusion markers, and more detailed monitoring could be beneficial

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