Abstract

The difference in CO2 tension between venous and arterial blood (delta PCO2) increases in low-flow states. Therefore, delta PCO2 has been suggested as an additional variable in the monitoring of perfusion. We measured CO2 tensions in arterial, mixed venous, hepatic venous, and femoral venous blood in 42 postoperative cardiac surgery patients. Splanchnic and leg blood flow was measured with dye dilution. Forty-three preoperative abdominal surgery patients served as controls. Systemic and femoral delta PCO2 was increased in cardiac patients, whereas there was no difference in splanchnic delta PCO2 between the groups. In cardiac patients, systemic delta PCO2 correlated well with both splanchnic and femoral delta PCO2 (r2 = .74 and r2 = .56, respectively). Femoral delta PCO2 was higher than splanchnic delta PCO2 (1.27 +/- .44 kPa versus .66 +/- .41; p < .001) after cardiac surgery, but not in the control group. The correlation between delta PCO2 and respective blood flow was weak in the whole body, the splanchnic region, and the leg. When splanchnic blood flow was low, systemic and splanchnic delta PCO2 varied widely. In the cardiac patients with an increased systemic delta PCO2 (> .93 kPa), systemic and regional blood flow was low, but there were no differences in systemic or regional oxygen consumption or lactate levels. After cardiac surgery, high systemic delta PCO2 is associated with marginal systemic and regional perfusion. The adequacy of regional blood flow cannot be assessed on the basis of the systemic delta PCO2.

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