Effects of dobutamine on systemic, regional and microcirculatory perfusion parameters in septic shock: a randomized, placebocontrolled, double-blind, crossover study
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Hernández, Glenn
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Effects of dobutamine on systemic, regional and microcirculatory perfusion parameters in septic shock: a randomized, placebocontrolled, double-blind, crossover study
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Abstract
Purpose: The role of
dobutamine during septic shock
resuscitation is still controversial
since most clinical studies have been
uncontrolled and no physiological
study has unequivocally demonstrated
a beneficial effect on tissue
perfusion. Our objective was to
determine the potential benefits of
dobutamine on hemodynamic, metabolic,
peripheral, hepatosplanchnic
and microcirculatory perfusion
parameters during early septic shock
resuscitation. Methods: We
designed a randomized, controlled,
double-blind, crossover study comparing
the effects of 2.5-h infusion of
dobutamine (5 mcg/kg/min fixeddose)
or placebo in 20 septic shock
patients with cardiac index C2.5 l/
min/m2 and hyperlactatemia. Primary
outcome was sublingual perfused
microvascular density. Results:
Despite an increasing cardiac index,
heart rate and left ventricular ejection
fraction, dobutamine had no effect on
sublingual perfused vessel density
[9.0 (7.9–10.1) vs. 9.1 n/mm
(7.9–9.9); p = 0.24] or microvascular
flow index [2.1 (1.8–2.5) vs. 2.1
(1.9–2.5); p = 0.73] compared to
placebo. No differences between
dobutamine and placebo were found
for the lactate levels, mixed venousarterial
pCO2 gradient, thenar muscle
oxygen saturation, capillary refill
time or gastric-to-arterial pCO2 gradient.
The indocyanine green plasma
disappearance rate [14.4 (9.5–25.6)
vs. 18.8 %/min (11.7–24.6);
p = 0.03] and the recovery slope of
thenar muscle oxygen saturation after
a vascular occlusion test [2.1
(1.1–3.1) vs. 2.5 %/s (1.2–3.4);
p = 0.01] were worse with dobutamine
compared to placebo.
Conclusions: Dobutamine failed to
improve sublingual microcirculatory,
metabolic, hepatosplanchnic or
peripheral perfusion parameters
despite inducing a significant increase
in systemic hemodynamic variables
in septic shock patients without low
cardiac output but with persistent
hypoperfusion.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
FONDECYT
Chile, Project 1100610
Quote Item
Intensive Care Med (2013) 39:1435–1443
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