Back to Search Start Over

Prognostic implications of microcirculatory perfusion versus macrocirculatory perfusion in cardiogenic shock: a CULPRIT-SHOCK substudy

Authors :
Tim P van de Hoef
Roberto Diletti
Georg Fuernau
Sakir Akin
Pranas Šerpytis
Jan J Piek
Christian Jung
Holger Thiele
Karl Fengler
Gilbert W M Wijntjens
José P S Henriques
Corstiaan A. den Uil
Rokas Serpytis
Intensive Care
Cardiology
ACS - Microcirculation
ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes
Graduate School
Source :
European Heart Journal-Acute Cardiovascular Care, 9(2), 108-119. SAGE Publications Ltd, European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care, 9(2), 108-119. SAGE Publications Ltd
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
SAGE Publications Ltd, 2020.

Abstract

Background: After early revascularisation, restoration of macrocirculatory perfusion parameters is the primary objective in the management of cardiogenic shock complicated acute myocardial infarction. Nevertheless, vital organ perfusion may be compromised at the systemic microcirculatory level, even in patients with preserved macrohaemodynamics. Microvascular perfusion was shown to have independent prognostic value for early mortality. The present study aims to compare the prognostic value of microcirculatory versus macrocirculatory perfusion parameters. Methods: This substudy of the culprit lesion-only percutaneous coronary intervention versus multivessel percutaneous coronary intervention in cardiogenic shock (CULPRIT-SHOCK) trial examined the sublingual capillary network using videomicroscopy post-percutaneous coronary intervention to determine the proportion of perfused capillaries (Results: Videomicroscopy measurements were performed in 66 patients. There was a significant adjusted association between microcirculatory perfusion parameters and the combined clinical endpoint (proportion of perfused capillaries: P=0.020; perfused capillary density: P=0.035), whereas there was no significant adjusted association between macrocirculatory perfusion parameters and the combined clinical endpoint (systolic blood pressure: P=0.205). Normotensive patients with compromised microcirculatory perfusion parameters had a higher risk of the combined clinical endpoint than normotensive patients with preserved microcirculatory perfusion parameters (proportion of perfused capillaries: Breslow P=0.014; perfused capillary density: Breslow P=0.076). Conclusions: There is a significant and independent association between microcirculatory perfusion parameters perfused capillary density and proportion of perfused capillaries and the combined clinical endpoint of all-cause death and renal replacement therapy at 30 days follow-up. In patients with loss of haemodynamic coherence between microcirculatory and macrocirculatory perfusion parameters, microcirculatory perfusion parameters confer dominant prognostic value.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20488734 and 20488726
Volume :
9
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal: Acute Cardiovascular Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a76f8ca516e2d8d42fa53bd6731f4513