Cargando…

Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration

INTRODUCTION: Low blood pressure, inadequate tissue oxygen delivery and mitochondrial dysfunction have all been implicated in the development of sepsis-induced organ failure. This study evaluated the effect on liver mitochondrial function of using norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in experim...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Regueira, Tomas, Bänziger, Bertram, Djafarzadeh, Siamak, Brandt, Sebastian, Gorrasi, Jose, Takala, Jukka, Lepper, Philipp M, Jakob, Stephan M
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2575568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18625036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6956
_version_ 1782160332425265152
author Regueira, Tomas
Bänziger, Bertram
Djafarzadeh, Siamak
Brandt, Sebastian
Gorrasi, Jose
Takala, Jukka
Lepper, Philipp M
Jakob, Stephan M
author_facet Regueira, Tomas
Bänziger, Bertram
Djafarzadeh, Siamak
Brandt, Sebastian
Gorrasi, Jose
Takala, Jukka
Lepper, Philipp M
Jakob, Stephan M
author_sort Regueira, Tomas
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Low blood pressure, inadequate tissue oxygen delivery and mitochondrial dysfunction have all been implicated in the development of sepsis-induced organ failure. This study evaluated the effect on liver mitochondrial function of using norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in experimental sepsis. METHODS: Thirteen anaesthetized pigs received endotoxin (Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide B0111:B4; 0.4 μg/kg per hour) and were subsequently randomly assigned to norepinephrine treatment or placebo for 10 hours. Norepinephrine dose was adjusted at 2-hour intervals to achieve 15 mmHg increases in mean arterial blood pressure up to 95 mmHg. Systemic (thermodilution) and hepatosplanchnic (ultrasound Doppler) blood flow were measured at each step. At the end of the experiment, hepatic mitochondrial oxygen consumption (high-resolution respirometry) and citrate synthase activity (spectrophotometry) were assessed. RESULTS: Mean arterial pressure (mmHg) increased only in norepinephrine-treated animals (from 73 [median; range 69 to 81] to 63 [60 to 68] in controls [P = 0.09] and from 83 [69 to 93] to 96 [86 to 108] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.019]). Cardiac index and systemic oxygen delivery (DO(2)) increased in both groups, but significantly more in the norepinephrine group (P < 0.03 for both). Cardiac index (ml/min per·kg) increased from 99 (range: 72 to 112) to 117 (110 to 232) in controls (P = 0.002), and from 107 (84 to 132) to 161 (147 to 340) in norepinephrine-treated animals (P = 0.001). DO(2 )(ml/min per·kg) increased from 13 (range: 11 to 15) to 16 (15 to 24) in controls (P = 0.028), and from 16 (12 to 19) to 29 (25 to 52) in norepinephrine-treated animals (P = 0.018). Systemic oxygen consumption (systemic VO(2)) increased in both groups (P < 0.05), whereas hepatosplanchnic flows, DO(2 )and VO(2 )remained stable. The hepatic lactate extraction ratio decreased in both groups (P = 0.05). Liver mitochondria complex I-dependent and II-dependent respiratory control ratios were increased in the norepinephrine group (complex I: 3.5 [range: 2.1 to 5.7] in controls versus 5.8 [4.8 to 6.4] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.015]; complex II: 3.1 [2.3 to 3.8] in controls versus 3.7 [3.3 to 4.6] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.09]). No differences were observed in citrate synthase activity. CONCLUSION: Norepinephrine treatment during endotoxaemia does not increase hepatosplanchnic flow, oxygen delivery or consumption, and does not improve the hepatic lactate extraction ratio. However, norepinephrine increases the liver mitochondria complex I-dependent and II-dependent respiratory control ratios. This effect was probably mediated by a direct effect of norepinephrine on liver cells.
format Text
id pubmed-2575568
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25755682008-10-30 Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration Regueira, Tomas Bänziger, Bertram Djafarzadeh, Siamak Brandt, Sebastian Gorrasi, Jose Takala, Jukka Lepper, Philipp M Jakob, Stephan M Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Low blood pressure, inadequate tissue oxygen delivery and mitochondrial dysfunction have all been implicated in the development of sepsis-induced organ failure. This study evaluated the effect on liver mitochondrial function of using norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in experimental sepsis. METHODS: Thirteen anaesthetized pigs received endotoxin (Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide B0111:B4; 0.4 μg/kg per hour) and were subsequently randomly assigned to norepinephrine treatment or placebo for 10 hours. Norepinephrine dose was adjusted at 2-hour intervals to achieve 15 mmHg increases in mean arterial blood pressure up to 95 mmHg. Systemic (thermodilution) and hepatosplanchnic (ultrasound Doppler) blood flow were measured at each step. At the end of the experiment, hepatic mitochondrial oxygen consumption (high-resolution respirometry) and citrate synthase activity (spectrophotometry) were assessed. RESULTS: Mean arterial pressure (mmHg) increased only in norepinephrine-treated animals (from 73 [median; range 69 to 81] to 63 [60 to 68] in controls [P = 0.09] and from 83 [69 to 93] to 96 [86 to 108] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.019]). Cardiac index and systemic oxygen delivery (DO(2)) increased in both groups, but significantly more in the norepinephrine group (P < 0.03 for both). Cardiac index (ml/min per·kg) increased from 99 (range: 72 to 112) to 117 (110 to 232) in controls (P = 0.002), and from 107 (84 to 132) to 161 (147 to 340) in norepinephrine-treated animals (P = 0.001). DO(2 )(ml/min per·kg) increased from 13 (range: 11 to 15) to 16 (15 to 24) in controls (P = 0.028), and from 16 (12 to 19) to 29 (25 to 52) in norepinephrine-treated animals (P = 0.018). Systemic oxygen consumption (systemic VO(2)) increased in both groups (P < 0.05), whereas hepatosplanchnic flows, DO(2 )and VO(2 )remained stable. The hepatic lactate extraction ratio decreased in both groups (P = 0.05). Liver mitochondria complex I-dependent and II-dependent respiratory control ratios were increased in the norepinephrine group (complex I: 3.5 [range: 2.1 to 5.7] in controls versus 5.8 [4.8 to 6.4] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.015]; complex II: 3.1 [2.3 to 3.8] in controls versus 3.7 [3.3 to 4.6] in norepinephrine-treated animals [P = 0.09]). No differences were observed in citrate synthase activity. CONCLUSION: Norepinephrine treatment during endotoxaemia does not increase hepatosplanchnic flow, oxygen delivery or consumption, and does not improve the hepatic lactate extraction ratio. However, norepinephrine increases the liver mitochondria complex I-dependent and II-dependent respiratory control ratios. This effect was probably mediated by a direct effect of norepinephrine on liver cells. BioMed Central 2008 2008-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC2575568/ /pubmed/18625036 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6956 Text en Copyright © 2008 Regueira et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Regueira, Tomas
Bänziger, Bertram
Djafarzadeh, Siamak
Brandt, Sebastian
Gorrasi, Jose
Takala, Jukka
Lepper, Philipp M
Jakob, Stephan M
Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title_full Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title_fullStr Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title_full_unstemmed Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title_short Norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
title_sort norepinephrine to increase blood pressure in endotoxaemic pigs is associated with improved hepatic mitochondrial respiration
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2575568/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18625036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc6956
work_keys_str_mv AT regueiratomas norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT banzigerbertram norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT djafarzadehsiamak norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT brandtsebastian norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT gorrasijose norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT takalajukka norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT lepperphilippm norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration
AT jakobstephanm norepinephrinetoincreasebloodpressureinendotoxaemicpigsisassociatedwithimprovedhepaticmitochondrialrespiration