Abstract

Healthy bowel function is an important factor when judging the advisability of early enteral nutrition in critically ill patients, but long-term observation and objective evaluation of gastrointestinal motility are difficult. In the study, real-time continuous measurement of gastrointestinal motility was performed in patients with severe sepsis using a developed bowel sound analysis system, and the correlation between bowel sounds and changes over time in blood concentrations of interleukin (IL)-6, which is associated with sepsis severity, was evaluated. The subjects were five adult patients in the acute phase of severe sepsis on a mechanical ventilator, with IL-6 blood concentrations ≥100pg/mL, who had consented to participate in the study. Gastrointestinal motility was measured for a total of 62,399min: 31,544min in 3 subjects in the no-steroids group and 30,855min in 2 subjects in the steroid treatment group. In the no-steroids group, the bowel sound counts were negatively correlated with IL-6 blood concentration, suggesting that gastrointestinal motility was suppressed as IL-6 blood concentration increased. However, in the steroid treatment group, gastrointestinal motility showed no correlation with IL-6 blood concentration (r =-0.25, p=0.27). The IL-6 blood concentration appears to have decreased with steroid treatment irrespective of changes in the state of sepsis, whereas bowel sound counts with the monitoring system reflected the changes in the state of sepsis, resulting in no correlation. This monitoring system provides a useful method of continuously, quantitatively, and non-invasively evaluating gastrointestinal motility in patients with severe sepsis. Gastrointestinal motility might be useful as a parameter reflecting disease severity, particularly in patients treated with steroids.

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