Transitions from Aerobic to Anaerobic Metabolism and Oxygen Debt during Elective Major and Emergency Non-Cardiac Surgery

Author:

Papagiannakis Nikolaos1ORCID,Ragias Dimitrios2ORCID,Ntalarizou Nicoleta3,Laou Eleni4,Kyriakaki Aikaterini5,Mavridis Theodoros6ORCID,Vahedian-Azimi Amir7ORCID,Sakellakis Minas8,Chalkias Athanasios910ORCID

Affiliation:

1. First Department of Neurology, Eginition University Hospital, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11528 Athens, Greece

2. Medical Center of Sofades, General Hospital of Karditsa, 43100 Karditsa, Greece

3. Postgraduate Study Program (MSc) “Resuscitation”, School of Medicine, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 11527 Athens, Greece

4. Department of Anesthesiology, Agia Sophia Children’s Hospital, 11527 Athens, Greece

5. Department of Anesthesiology, General Hospital of Syros Vardakeio and Proio, 84100 Syros, Greece

6. Department of Neurology, Tallaght University Hospital (TUH)/The Adelaide and Meath Hospital Incorporating the National Children’s Hospital (AMNCH), D24 NR0A Dublin, Ireland

7. Nursing Care Research Center, Clinical Sciences Institute, Nursing Faculty, Baqiyatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran 1435915371, Iran

8. Department of Medicine, Jacobi Medical Center-North Central Bronx Hospital, Bronx, NY 10467, USA

9. Institute for Translational Medicine and Therapeutics, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104-5158, USA

10. Outcomes Research Consortium, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA

Abstract

Introduction: Intraoperative hemodynamic and metabolic optimization of both the high-risk surgical patients and critically ill patients remains challenging. Reductions in oxygen delivery or increases in oxygen consumption can initiate complex cellular processes precipitating oxygen debt (OXD). Methods: This study tested the hypothesis that intraoperative changes in sublingual microcirculatory flow reflect clinically relevant transitions from aerobic to anaerobic metabolism (TRANAM). We included patients undergoing elective major and emergency non-cardiac surgery. Macro- and microcirculatory variables, oxygen extraction, and transitions of metabolism were assessed in both cohorts. Results: In the elective group, OXD was progressively increased over time, with an estimated 2.24 unit increase every 30 min (adjusted p < 0.001). Also, OXD was negatively correlated with central venous pressure (ρ = −0.247, adjusted p = 0.006) and positively correlated with stroke volume variation (ρ = 0.185, adjusted p = 0.041). However, it was not significantly correlated with sublingual microcirculation variables. In the emergency surgery group, OXD increased during the first two intraoperative hours and then gradually decreased until the end of surgery. In that cohort, OXD was positively correlated with diastolic arterial pressure (ρ = 0.338, adjpatients and the critically ill patients remains challengingsted p = 0.015). Also, OXD was negatively correlated with cardiac index (ρ = −0.352, adjusted p = 0.003), Consensus Proportion of Perfused Vessels (PPV) (ρ = −0.438, adjusted p < 0.001), and Consensus PPV (small) (ρ = −0.434, adjusted p < 0.001). Conclusions: TRANAM were evident in both the elective major and emergency non-cardiac surgery cohorts independent of underlying alterations in the sublingual microcirculation.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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