1. Effects of Hyperoxia During Resuscitation From Hemorrhagic Shock in Swine With Preexisting Coronary Artery Disease
- Author
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Tobias Hölle, Michael Gröger, Tamara Merz, Maurizio Loconte, Peter Radermacher, E. Antonucci, Ulrich Wachter, Martin Wepler, David Katzsch, Michael Holzhauser, Benedikt L. Nussbaum, Pierre Asfar, Andrea Hoffmann, Martin Matejovic, Enrico Calzia, Oscar McCook, Michael K. Georgieff, Clair Hartmann, and Josef Vogt
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Resuscitation ,Swine ,Hypercholesterolemia ,Blood Pressure ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Hyperoxia ,Shock, Hemorrhagic ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Kidney Function Tests ,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine ,Coronary artery disease ,Random Allocation ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Prospective Studies ,Septic shock ,business.industry ,Hemodynamics ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,Hypothermia ,medicine.disease ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Heart failure ,Shock (circulatory) ,Heart Function Tests ,Cardiology ,Cytokines ,Blood Gas Analysis ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Investigation of the effects of hyperoxia during resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock in swine with preexisting coronary artery disease.Prospective, controlled, randomized trial.University animal research laboratory.Nineteen hypercholesterolemic pigs with preexisting coronary artery disease.Anesthetized, mechanically ventilated, and surgically instrumented pigs underwent 3 hours of hemorrhagic shock (removal of 30% of the calculated blood volume and subsequent titration of mean arterial blood pressure ≈40 mm Hg). Postshock resuscitation (48 hr) comprised retransfusion of shed blood, crystalloids (balanced electrolyte solution), and norepinephrine support. Pigs were randomly assigned to "control" (FIO2 0.3, adjusted for arterial oxygen saturation ≥ 90%) and "hyperoxia" (FIO2 1.0 for 24 hr) groups.Before, at the end of shock and every 12 hours of resuscitation, datasets comprising hemodynamics, calorimetry, blood gases, cytokines, and cardiac and renal function were recorded. Postmortem, organs were sampled for immunohistochemistry, western blotting, and mitochondrial high-resolution respirometry. Survival rates were 50% and 89% in the control and hyperoxia groups, respectively (p = 0.077). Apart from higher relaxation constant τ at 24 hours, hyperoxia did not affect cardiac function. However, troponin values were lower (2.2 [0.9-6.2] vs 6.9 [4.8-9.8] ng/mL; p0.05) at the end of the experiment. Furthermore, hyperoxia decreased cardiac 3-nitrotyrosine formation and increased inducible nitric oxide synthase expression. Plasma creatinine values were lower in the hyperoxia group during resuscitation coinciding with significantly improved renal mitochondrial respiratory capacity and lower 3-nitrotyrosine formation.Hyperoxia during resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock in swine with preexisting coronary artery disease reduced renal dysfunction and cardiac injury, potentially resulting in improved survival, most likely due to increased mitochondrial respiratory capacity and decreased oxidative and nitrosative stress. Compared with our previous study, the present results suggest a higher benefit of hyperoxia in comorbid swine due to an increased susceptibility to hemorrhagic shock.
- Published
- 2017
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