Hypercapnia Improves Tissue Oxygenation

Author:

Akça Ozan1,Doufas Anthony G.2,Morioka Nobutada3,Iscoe Steve4,Fisher Joseph5,Sessler Daniel I.6

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Director, Outcomes Research®Institute; Assistant Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of Louisville.

2. Assistant Professor.

3. Research Fellow, Outcomes Research®Institute and Department of Anesthesiology, University of Louisville.

4. Associate Professor, Department of Physiology, Queens University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

5. Associate Professor, Department of Anaesthesia, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

6. Associate Dean for Research, Director Outcomes Research®Institute, Weakley Distinguished University Professor of Anesthesiology, University of Louisville; Professor and Vice-Chair, Ludwig Boltzmann Institute, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Abstract

Background Wound infections are common, serious, surgical complications. Oxidative killing by neutrophils is the primary defense against surgical pathogens and increasing intraoperative tissue oxygen tension markedly reduces the risk of such infections. Since hypercapnia improves cardiac output and peripheral tissue perfusion, we tested the hypothesis that peripheral tissue oxygenation increases as a function of arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO(2)) in anesthetized humans. Methods General anesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with sevoflurane in 30% oxygen in 10 healthy volunteers. Subcutaneous tissue oxygen tension (PsqO(2)) was recorded from a subcutaneous tonometer. An oximeter probe on the upper arm measured muscle oxygen saturation. Cardiac output was monitored noninvasively. PaCO(2) was adjusted to 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60 mmHg in random order with each concentration being maintained for 45 min.(2) (2) Results Increasing PaCO(2) linearly increased cardiac index and PsqO(2) : PsqO(2) = 35.42 + 0.77 (PaCO(2)), < 0.001. Conclusions The observed difference in PsqO(2) is clinically important because previous work suggests that comparable increases in tissue oxygenation reduced the risk of surgical infection from -8% to 2 to 3%. We conclude that mild intraoperative hypercapnia increased peripheral tissue oxygenation in healthy human subjects, which may improve resistance to surgical wound infections.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference46 articles.

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