Cargando…

Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery

Minimally invasive techniques to access subcutaneous adipose tissue for glucose monitoring are successfully applied in type1 diabetic and critically ill patients. During critical illness, the addition of a lactate sensor might enhance prognosis and early intervention. Our objective was to evaluate S...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ellmerer, Martin, Haluzik, Martin, Blaha, Jan, Kremen, Jaromir, Svacina, Stepan, Plasnik, Andreas, Ikeoka, Dimas, Bodenlenz, Manfred, Schaupp, Lukas, Plank, Johannes, Pieber, Thomas R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2778464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19946427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2009/390975
_version_ 1782174253125206016
author Ellmerer, Martin
Haluzik, Martin
Blaha, Jan
Kremen, Jaromir
Svacina, Stepan
Plasnik, Andreas
Ikeoka, Dimas
Bodenlenz, Manfred
Schaupp, Lukas
Plank, Johannes
Pieber, Thomas R.
author_facet Ellmerer, Martin
Haluzik, Martin
Blaha, Jan
Kremen, Jaromir
Svacina, Stepan
Plasnik, Andreas
Ikeoka, Dimas
Bodenlenz, Manfred
Schaupp, Lukas
Plank, Johannes
Pieber, Thomas R.
author_sort Ellmerer, Martin
collection PubMed
description Minimally invasive techniques to access subcutaneous adipose tissue for glucose monitoring are successfully applied in type1 diabetic and critically ill patients. During critical illness, the addition of a lactate sensor might enhance prognosis and early intervention. Our objective was to evaluate SAT as a site for lactate measurement in critically ill patients. In 40 patients after major cardiac surgery, arterial blood and SAT microdialysis samples were taken in hourly intervals. Lactate concentrations from SAT were prospectively calibrated to arterial blood. Analysis was based on comparison of absolute lactate concentrations (arterial blood vs. SAT) and on a 6-hour lactate trend analysis, to test whether changes of arterial lactate can be described by SAT lactate. Correlation between lactate readings from arterial blood vs. SAT was highly significant (r2 = 0.71, P < .001). Nevertheless, 42% of SAT lactate readings and 35% of the SAT lactate trends were not comparable to arterial blood. When a 6-hour stabilization period after catheter insertion was introduced, 5.5% of SAT readings and 41.6% of the SAT lactate trends remained incomparable to arterial blood. In conclusion, replacement of arterial blood lactate measurements by readings from SAT is associated with a substantial shortcoming in clinical predictability in patients after major cardiac surgery.
format Text
id pubmed-2778464
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2009
publisher Hindawi Publishing Corporation
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-27784642009-11-24 Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery Ellmerer, Martin Haluzik, Martin Blaha, Jan Kremen, Jaromir Svacina, Stepan Plasnik, Andreas Ikeoka, Dimas Bodenlenz, Manfred Schaupp, Lukas Plank, Johannes Pieber, Thomas R. Int J Endocrinol Research Article Minimally invasive techniques to access subcutaneous adipose tissue for glucose monitoring are successfully applied in type1 diabetic and critically ill patients. During critical illness, the addition of a lactate sensor might enhance prognosis and early intervention. Our objective was to evaluate SAT as a site for lactate measurement in critically ill patients. In 40 patients after major cardiac surgery, arterial blood and SAT microdialysis samples were taken in hourly intervals. Lactate concentrations from SAT were prospectively calibrated to arterial blood. Analysis was based on comparison of absolute lactate concentrations (arterial blood vs. SAT) and on a 6-hour lactate trend analysis, to test whether changes of arterial lactate can be described by SAT lactate. Correlation between lactate readings from arterial blood vs. SAT was highly significant (r2 = 0.71, P < .001). Nevertheless, 42% of SAT lactate readings and 35% of the SAT lactate trends were not comparable to arterial blood. When a 6-hour stabilization period after catheter insertion was introduced, 5.5% of SAT readings and 41.6% of the SAT lactate trends remained incomparable to arterial blood. In conclusion, replacement of arterial blood lactate measurements by readings from SAT is associated with a substantial shortcoming in clinical predictability in patients after major cardiac surgery. Hindawi Publishing Corporation 2009 2009-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC2778464/ /pubmed/19946427 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2009/390975 Text en Copyright © 2009 Martin Ellmerer et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ellmerer, Martin
Haluzik, Martin
Blaha, Jan
Kremen, Jaromir
Svacina, Stepan
Plasnik, Andreas
Ikeoka, Dimas
Bodenlenz, Manfred
Schaupp, Lukas
Plank, Johannes
Pieber, Thomas R.
Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title_full Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title_fullStr Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title_short Clinical Evaluation of Subcutaneous Lactate Measurement in Patients after Major Cardiac Surgery
title_sort clinical evaluation of subcutaneous lactate measurement in patients after major cardiac surgery
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2778464/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19946427
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2009/390975
work_keys_str_mv AT ellmerermartin clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT haluzikmartin clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT blahajan clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT kremenjaromir clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT svacinastepan clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT plasnikandreas clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT ikeokadimas clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT bodenlenzmanfred clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT schaupplukas clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT plankjohannes clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery
AT pieberthomasr clinicalevaluationofsubcutaneouslactatemeasurementinpatientsaftermajorcardiacsurgery