• Br J Anaesth · Dec 2013

    Confocal laser endomicroscopy reliably detects sepsis-related and treatment-associated changes in intestinal mucosal microcirculation.

    • C Schmidt, C Lautenschläger, B Petzold, Y Sakr, G Marx, and A Stallmach.
    • Clinic for Internal Medicine IV and.
    • Br J Anaesth. 2013 Dec 1;111(6):996-1003.

    BackgroundMicrocirculatory alterations play a central role in the pathophysiology of sepsis. We investigated probe-based confocal laser endomicroscopy (pCLE) to assess alterations in mucosal microcirculatory perfusion in vivo in a porcine model of septic shock and in patients fulfilling consensus criteria for severe sepsis.MethodsSeptic shock was induced using a faecal peritonitis model in anaesthetized, mechanically ventilated pigs. Mucosal microcirculation was assessed using pCLE in the stomach, duodenum, terminal ileum, and rectum. Duodenal microcirculation was further evaluated in 10 patients with severe sepsis and in 8 healthy controls to quantify capillary diameter, capillary length, and functional capillary density (FCD).ResultsIn the animal model, FCD was markedly decreased in duodenal (P<0.001), ileal (P<0.001), gastric (P<0.001), and rectal mucosa (P<0.005) 4 h after induction of sepsis. After volume therapy, FCD partially recovered to 90.0% (duodenum), 94.4% (ileum), 95.4% (gastric), and 97% (rectum) of baseline values, indicating decoupling of microvascular and macrovascular flow. In septic patients, the mean capillary diameter (P<0.01) and FCD (P<0.05) in duodenal mucosa were decreased compared with healthy controls.ConclusionspCLE reliably detected and quantified microcirculatory alterations in the gastrointestinal mucosa in a porcine model of sepsis and in patients with severe sepsis. Our data suggest that pCLE is a promising tool to assess the efficacy of therapeutic interventions on mucosal microcirculation in real-time, even in the clinical context.

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