Affiliation:
1. Department of Surgery, University of Texas Southwestern MedicalCenter, Dallas 75235-9031.
Abstract
The effects of hemorrhagic shock on left ventricular dimensions and volume were studied in 15 splenectomized dogs. A 42 +/- 1% decrease in total blood volume caused arterial blood pressure to fall 60% (from 120 +/- 5 to 48 +/- 3 mmHg); the first derivative of left ventricular pressure at a developed pressure of 40 mmHg fell 54% (from 1,930 +/- 94 to 905 +/- 93 mmHg/s, P < 0.05). Cardiac output fell 76% due to a 73% decrease in stroke volume; heart rate was unchanged at the end of hemorrhage but increased 50% during 3 h of sustained shock (from 110 +/- 6 to 166 +/- 8 beats/min, P < 0.05). During hemorrhage the septal-lateral and the anterior-posterior end-diastolic dimensions fell to a greater extent (7.8 mm, -21% and 7.0 mm, -18%, respectively) than the apex-base dimension (2.3 mm, -3.3%, P < 0.05). As a result of these dimensional changes, left ventricular end-diastolic volume fell 39% (from 48 +/- 2 to 28 +/- 1 cm3, P < 0.01). End-systolic dimensions fell in the same proportion during hemorrhage, resulting in a 30% decrease in end-systolic volume (from 30 +/- 2 to 21 +/- 1 cm3, P < 0.05). After 120 min of sustained shock, all end-diastolic dimensions remained unchanged, but end-systolic dimensions and volume increased significantly from values measured at end hemorrhage (P < 0.05), causing ejection fraction and stroke volume to fall to a greater extent. This study confirms a pronounced reduction in the minor axes of the left ventricle during hemorrhagic shock with subsequent reduction in ventricular function.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
7 articles.
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