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Br J Anaesth ; 96(6): 708-14, 2006 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16675511

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Tissue oxygenation is the primary determinant of wound infection risk. Mild hypercapnia markedly improves cutaneous, subcutaneous (s.c.), and muscular tissue oxygenation in volunteers and patients. However, relative contributions of increased cardiac output and peripheral vasodilation to this response remains unknown. We thus tested the hypothesis that increased cardiac output is the dominant mechanism. METHODS: We recruited 10 ASA III patients, aged 40-65 yr, undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass for this crossover trial. After induction of anaesthesia, a Silastic tonometer was inserted s.c. in the upper arm. S.C. tissue oxygen tension was measured with both polarographic electrode and fluorescence-based systems. Oximeter probes were placed bilaterally on the forehead to monitor cerebral oxygenation. After initiation of cardiopulmonary bypass, in random order patients were exposed to two arterial CO(2) partial pressures for 30 min each: 35 (normocapnia) or 50 mm Hg (hypercapnia). Bypass pump flow was kept constant throughout the measurement periods. RESULTS: Hypercapnia during bypass had essentially no effect on Pa(CO(2)) , mean arterial pressure, or tissue temperature. Pa(CO(2)) and pH differed significantly. S.C. tissue oxygenation was virtually identical during the two Pa(CO(2)) periods [139 (50-163) vs 145 (38-158), P=0.335] [median (range)]. In contrast, cerebral oxygen saturation (our positive control measurement) was significantly less during normocapnia [57 (28-67)%] than hypercapnia [64 (37-89)%, P=0.025]. CONCLUSIONS: Mild hypercapnia, which normally markedly increases tissue oxygenation, did not do so during cardiopulmonary bypass with fixed pump output. This suggests that hypercapnia normally increases tissue oxygenation by increasing cardiac output rather than direct dilation of peripheral vessels.


Subject(s)
Cardiopulmonary Bypass , Hypercapnia/physiopathology , Oxygen Consumption , Subcutaneous Tissue/blood supply , Adult , Carbon Dioxide/blood , Cardiac Output , Cerebrovascular Circulation , Cross-Over Studies , Female , Humans , Hypercapnia/blood , Intraoperative Period , Male , Middle Aged , Monitoring, Intraoperative/instrumentation , Monitoring, Intraoperative/methods , Oximetry/instrumentation , Oxygen/blood , Partial Pressure , Regional Blood Flow , Reproducibility of Results , Skin/blood supply
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