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Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs

INTRODUCTION: Our understanding of septic acute kidney injury (AKI) remains incomplete. A fundamental step is the use of animal models designed to meet the criteria of human sepsis. Therefore, we dynamically assessed renal haemodynamic, microvascular and metabolic responses to, and ultrastructural s...

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Autores principales: Chvojka, Jiri, Sykora, Roman, Krouzecky, Ales, Radej, Jaroslav, Varnerova, Veronika, Karvunidis, Thomas, Hes, Ondrej, Novak, Ivan, Radermacher, Peter, Matejovic, Martin
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2646329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19108740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc7164
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author Chvojka, Jiri
Sykora, Roman
Krouzecky, Ales
Radej, Jaroslav
Varnerova, Veronika
Karvunidis, Thomas
Hes, Ondrej
Novak, Ivan
Radermacher, Peter
Matejovic, Martin
author_facet Chvojka, Jiri
Sykora, Roman
Krouzecky, Ales
Radej, Jaroslav
Varnerova, Veronika
Karvunidis, Thomas
Hes, Ondrej
Novak, Ivan
Radermacher, Peter
Matejovic, Martin
author_sort Chvojka, Jiri
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Our understanding of septic acute kidney injury (AKI) remains incomplete. A fundamental step is the use of animal models designed to meet the criteria of human sepsis. Therefore, we dynamically assessed renal haemodynamic, microvascular and metabolic responses to, and ultrastructural sequelae of, sepsis in a porcine model of faecal peritonitis-induced progressive hyperdynamic sepsis. METHODS: In eight anaesthetised and mechanically ventilated pigs, faecal peritonitis was induced by inoculating autologous faeces. Six sham-operated animals served as time-matched controls. Noradrenaline was administered to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) greater than or equal to 65 mmHg. Before and at 12, 18 and 22 hours of peritonitis systemic haemodynamics, total renal (ultrasound Doppler) and cortex microvascular (laser Doppler) blood flow, oxygen transport and renal venous pressure, acid base balance and lactate/pyruvate ratios were measured. Postmortem histological analysis of kidney tissue was performed. RESULTS: All septic pigs developed hyperdynamic shock with AKI as evidenced by a 30% increase in plasma creatinine levels. Kidney blood flow remained well-preserved and renal vascular resistance did not change either. Renal perfusion pressure significantly decreased in the AKI group as a result of gradually increased renal venous pressure. In parallel with a significant decrease in renal cortex microvascular perfusion, progressive renal venous acidosis and an increase in lactate/pyruvate ratio developed, while renal oxygen consumption remained unchanged. Renal histology revealed only subtle changes without signs of acute tubular necrosis. CONCLUSION: The results of this experimental study argue against the concept of renal vasoconstriction and tubular necrosis as physiological and morphological substrates of early septic AKI. Renal venous congestion might be a hidden and clinically unrecognised contributor to the development of kidney dysfunction.
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spelling pubmed-26463292009-02-24 Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs Chvojka, Jiri Sykora, Roman Krouzecky, Ales Radej, Jaroslav Varnerova, Veronika Karvunidis, Thomas Hes, Ondrej Novak, Ivan Radermacher, Peter Matejovic, Martin Crit Care Research INTRODUCTION: Our understanding of septic acute kidney injury (AKI) remains incomplete. A fundamental step is the use of animal models designed to meet the criteria of human sepsis. Therefore, we dynamically assessed renal haemodynamic, microvascular and metabolic responses to, and ultrastructural sequelae of, sepsis in a porcine model of faecal peritonitis-induced progressive hyperdynamic sepsis. METHODS: In eight anaesthetised and mechanically ventilated pigs, faecal peritonitis was induced by inoculating autologous faeces. Six sham-operated animals served as time-matched controls. Noradrenaline was administered to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) greater than or equal to 65 mmHg. Before and at 12, 18 and 22 hours of peritonitis systemic haemodynamics, total renal (ultrasound Doppler) and cortex microvascular (laser Doppler) blood flow, oxygen transport and renal venous pressure, acid base balance and lactate/pyruvate ratios were measured. Postmortem histological analysis of kidney tissue was performed. RESULTS: All septic pigs developed hyperdynamic shock with AKI as evidenced by a 30% increase in plasma creatinine levels. Kidney blood flow remained well-preserved and renal vascular resistance did not change either. Renal perfusion pressure significantly decreased in the AKI group as a result of gradually increased renal venous pressure. In parallel with a significant decrease in renal cortex microvascular perfusion, progressive renal venous acidosis and an increase in lactate/pyruvate ratio developed, while renal oxygen consumption remained unchanged. Renal histology revealed only subtle changes without signs of acute tubular necrosis. CONCLUSION: The results of this experimental study argue against the concept of renal vasoconstriction and tubular necrosis as physiological and morphological substrates of early septic AKI. Renal venous congestion might be a hidden and clinically unrecognised contributor to the development of kidney dysfunction. BioMed Central 2008 2008-12-24 /pmc/articles/PMC2646329/ /pubmed/19108740 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc7164 Text en Copyright © 2009 Chvojka 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
Chvojka, Jiri
Sykora, Roman
Krouzecky, Ales
Radej, Jaroslav
Varnerova, Veronika
Karvunidis, Thomas
Hes, Ondrej
Novak, Ivan
Radermacher, Peter
Matejovic, Martin
Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title_full Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title_fullStr Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title_full_unstemmed Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title_short Renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
title_sort renal haemodynamic, microcirculatory, metabolic and histopathological responses to peritonitis-induced septic shock in pigs
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2646329/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19108740
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/cc7164
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