Cargando…

Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock

INTRODUCTION: Veno-arterial extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is increasingly being used to treat rapidly progressing or severe cardiogenic shock. However, it has been repeatedly shown that increased afterload associated with ECLS significantly diminishes left ventricular (LV) performance. The obje...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ostadal, Petr, Mlcek, Mikulas, Gorhan, Holger, Simundic, Ivo, Strunina, Svitlana, Hrachovina, Matej, Krüger, Andreas, Vondrakova, Dagmar, Janotka, Marek, Hala, Pavel, Mates, Martin, Ostadal, Martin, Leiter, James C., Kittnar, Otomar, Neuzil, Petr
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5915277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29689088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196321
_version_ 1783316842300833792
author Ostadal, Petr
Mlcek, Mikulas
Gorhan, Holger
Simundic, Ivo
Strunina, Svitlana
Hrachovina, Matej
Krüger, Andreas
Vondrakova, Dagmar
Janotka, Marek
Hala, Pavel
Mates, Martin
Ostadal, Martin
Leiter, James C.
Kittnar, Otomar
Neuzil, Petr
author_facet Ostadal, Petr
Mlcek, Mikulas
Gorhan, Holger
Simundic, Ivo
Strunina, Svitlana
Hrachovina, Matej
Krüger, Andreas
Vondrakova, Dagmar
Janotka, Marek
Hala, Pavel
Mates, Martin
Ostadal, Martin
Leiter, James C.
Kittnar, Otomar
Neuzil, Petr
author_sort Ostadal, Petr
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Veno-arterial extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is increasingly being used to treat rapidly progressing or severe cardiogenic shock. However, it has been repeatedly shown that increased afterload associated with ECLS significantly diminishes left ventricular (LV) performance. The objective of the present study was to compare LV function and coronary flow during standard continuous-flow ECLS support and electrocardiogram (ECG)-synchronized pulsatile ECLS flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock. METHODS: Sixteen female swine (mean body weight 45 kg) underwent ECLS implantation under general anesthesia and artificial ventilation. Subsequently, acute cardiogenic shock, with documented signs of tissue hypoperfusion, was induced by initiating global myocardial hypoxia. Hemodynamic cardiac performance variables and coronary flow were then measured at different rates of continuous or pulsatile ECLS flow (ranging from 1 L/min to 4 L/min) using arterial and venous catheters, a pulmonary artery catheter, an LV pressure-volume loop catheter, and a Doppler coronary guide-wire. RESULTS: Myocardial hypoxia resulted in declines in mean cardiac output to 1.7±0.7 L/min, systolic blood pressure to 64±22 mmHg, and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) to 22±7%. Synchronized pulsatile flow was associated with a significant reduction in LV end-systolic volume by 6.2 mL (6.7%), an increase in LV stroke volume by 5.0 mL (17.4%), higher LVEF by 4.5% (18.8% relative), cardiac output by 0.37 L/min (17.1%), and mean arterial pressure by 3.0 mmHg (5.5%) when compared with continuous ECLS flow at all ECLS flow rates (P<0.05). At selected ECLS flow rates, pulsatile flow also reduced LV end-diastolic pressure, end-diastolic volume, and systolic pressure. ECG-synchronized pulsatile flow was also associated with significantly increased (7% to 22%) coronary flow at all ECLS flow rates. CONCLUSION: ECG-synchronized pulsatile ECLS flow preserved LV function and coronary flow compared with standard continuous-flow ECLS in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5915277
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-59152772018-05-11 Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock Ostadal, Petr Mlcek, Mikulas Gorhan, Holger Simundic, Ivo Strunina, Svitlana Hrachovina, Matej Krüger, Andreas Vondrakova, Dagmar Janotka, Marek Hala, Pavel Mates, Martin Ostadal, Martin Leiter, James C. Kittnar, Otomar Neuzil, Petr PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Veno-arterial extracorporeal life support (ECLS) is increasingly being used to treat rapidly progressing or severe cardiogenic shock. However, it has been repeatedly shown that increased afterload associated with ECLS significantly diminishes left ventricular (LV) performance. The objective of the present study was to compare LV function and coronary flow during standard continuous-flow ECLS support and electrocardiogram (ECG)-synchronized pulsatile ECLS flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock. METHODS: Sixteen female swine (mean body weight 45 kg) underwent ECLS implantation under general anesthesia and artificial ventilation. Subsequently, acute cardiogenic shock, with documented signs of tissue hypoperfusion, was induced by initiating global myocardial hypoxia. Hemodynamic cardiac performance variables and coronary flow were then measured at different rates of continuous or pulsatile ECLS flow (ranging from 1 L/min to 4 L/min) using arterial and venous catheters, a pulmonary artery catheter, an LV pressure-volume loop catheter, and a Doppler coronary guide-wire. RESULTS: Myocardial hypoxia resulted in declines in mean cardiac output to 1.7±0.7 L/min, systolic blood pressure to 64±22 mmHg, and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) to 22±7%. Synchronized pulsatile flow was associated with a significant reduction in LV end-systolic volume by 6.2 mL (6.7%), an increase in LV stroke volume by 5.0 mL (17.4%), higher LVEF by 4.5% (18.8% relative), cardiac output by 0.37 L/min (17.1%), and mean arterial pressure by 3.0 mmHg (5.5%) when compared with continuous ECLS flow at all ECLS flow rates (P<0.05). At selected ECLS flow rates, pulsatile flow also reduced LV end-diastolic pressure, end-diastolic volume, and systolic pressure. ECG-synchronized pulsatile flow was also associated with significantly increased (7% to 22%) coronary flow at all ECLS flow rates. CONCLUSION: ECG-synchronized pulsatile ECLS flow preserved LV function and coronary flow compared with standard continuous-flow ECLS in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock. Public Library of Science 2018-04-24 /pmc/articles/PMC5915277/ /pubmed/29689088 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196321 Text en © 2018 Ostadal et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ostadal, Petr
Mlcek, Mikulas
Gorhan, Holger
Simundic, Ivo
Strunina, Svitlana
Hrachovina, Matej
Krüger, Andreas
Vondrakova, Dagmar
Janotka, Marek
Hala, Pavel
Mates, Martin
Ostadal, Martin
Leiter, James C.
Kittnar, Otomar
Neuzil, Petr
Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title_full Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title_fullStr Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title_full_unstemmed Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title_short Electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
title_sort electrocardiogram-synchronized pulsatile extracorporeal life support preserves left ventricular function and coronary flow in a porcine model of cardiogenic shock
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5915277/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29689088
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0196321
work_keys_str_mv AT ostadalpetr electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT mlcekmikulas electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT gorhanholger electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT simundicivo electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT struninasvitlana electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT hrachovinamatej electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT krugerandreas electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT vondrakovadagmar electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT janotkamarek electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT halapavel electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT matesmartin electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT ostadalmartin electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT leiterjamesc electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT kittnarotomar electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock
AT neuzilpetr electrocardiogramsynchronizedpulsatileextracorporeallifesupportpreservesleftventricularfunctionandcoronaryflowinaporcinemodelofcardiogenicshock