Journal ArticleDOI
Microcirculatory alterations in patients with severe sepsis: impact of time of assessment and relationship with outcome.
Daniel De Backer,Katia Donadello,Yasser Sakr,Gustavo A. Ospina-Tascón,Diamantino Salgado,Sabino Scolletta,Jean Louis Vincent +6 more
TLDR
Microcirculatory alterations are stronger predictors of outcome than global hemodynamic variables in patients with severe sepsis.Abstract:
Objectives: Sepsis induces microvascular alterations that may play an important role in the development of organ dysfunction. However, the relationship of these alterations to systemic variables and outcome is still not well defined. We investigated which factors may influence microcirculatory alterations in patients with severe sepsis and whether these are independently associated with mortality. Design: Analysis of prospectively collected data from previously published studies by our group. Setting: A 36-bed, medicosurgical university hospital Department of Intensive Care. Patients: A total of 252 patients with severe sepsis in whom the sublingual microcirculation was visualized using orthogonal polarization spectral or sidestream darkfield imaging techniques. Measurements and Main Results: Microcirculatory measurements were obtained either early, within 24 h of the onset of severe sepsis (n = 204), or later, after 48 h (n = 48). When multiple measurements were obtained, only the first was considered. Although global hemodynamic variables were relatively preserved (mean arterial pressure 70 [65–77] mm Hg, cardiac index 3.3 [2.7–4.0] L/min.m 2 , and Svo 2 68.3 [62.8–74.7]%),read more
Citations
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Iconographies supplémentaires de l'article : Profil évolutif et intérêt pronostique des altérations métaboliques musculaires au cours du choc septique : étude par microdialyse musculaire
TL;DR: La microdialyse musculaire represente une technique quantitative du monitorage des alterations metaboliques induites par les perturbations de the microcirculation d’analyser les modifications metaboliques musculaires au cours du choc septique and de determiner leurs interets pronostiques.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI
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Journal ArticleDOI
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R. P. Dellinger,Mitchell M. Levy,Andrew Rhodes,Djillali Annane,Herwig Gerlach,Steven M. Opal,Jonathan E. Sevransky,Charles L. Sprung,Ivor S. Douglas,Roman Jaeschke,Tiffany M. Osborn,Mark E. Nunnally,Konrad Reinhart,Ruth M. Kleinpell,Derek C. Angus,Clifford S. Deutschman,Flávia Ribeiro Machado,Gordon D. Rubenfeld,Steven A R Webb,Richard Beale,Jean Louis Vincent,Rui Moreno +21 more
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Jean Louis Vincent,R. Moreno,Jukka Takala,Sheila Willatts,A. de Mendonça,Hajo A. Bruining,C. K. Reinhart,P. M. Suter,L. G. Thijs +8 more
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Journal ArticleDOI
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Mitchell M. Levy,Mitchell P. Fink,John C. Marshall,Edward Abraham,Derek C. Angus,Deborah J. Cook,Jonathan M. Cohen,Steven M. Opal,Jean Louis Vincent,Graham Ramsay +9 more
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APACHE II-A Severity of Disease Classification System: Reply
TL;DR: The form and validation results of APACHE II, a severity of disease classification system, are presented, showing an increasing score was closely correlated with the subsequent risk of hospital death for 5815 intensive care admissions from 13 hospitals.
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Surviving sepsis campaign: international guidelines for management of severe sepsis and septic shock: 2012.
R. P. Dellinger,Mitchell M. Levy,Andrew Rhodes,Djillali Annane,Herwig Gerlach,Steven M. Opal,Jonathan E. Sevransky,Charles L. Sprung,Ivor S. Douglas,Roman Jaeschke,Tiffany M. Osborn,Mark E. Nunnally,Konrad Reinhart,Ruth M. Kleinpell,Derek C. Angus,Clifford S. Deutschman,Flávia Ribeiro Machado,Gordon D. Rubenfeld,Steven A R Webb,Richard Beale,Jean Louis Vincent,Rui Moreno +21 more