• Intensive care medicine · Jan 2011

    Effects of norepinephrine on renal perfusion, filtration and oxygenation in vasodilatory shock and acute kidney injury.

    • Bengt Redfors, Gudrun Bragadottir, Johan Sellgren, Kristina Swärd, and Sven-Erik Ricksten.
    • Department of Cardiothoracic Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, 413 45 Gothenburg, Sweden.
    • Intensive Care Med. 2011 Jan 1;37(1):60-7.

    PurposeThe use of norepinephrine (NE) in patients with volume-resuscitated vasodilatory shock and acute kidney injury (AKI) remains the subject of much debate and controversy. The effects of NE-induced variations in mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) on renal blood flow (RBF), oxygen delivery (RDO(2)), glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and the renal oxygen supply/demand relationship (renal oxygenation) in vasodilatory shock with AKI have not been previously studied.MethodsTwelve post-cardiac surgery patients with NE-dependent vasodilatory shock and AKI were studied 2-6 days after surgery. NE infusion rate was randomly and sequentially titrated to target MAPs of 60, 75 and 90 mmHg. At each target MAP, data on systemic haemodynamics, RBF, GFR and renal oxygen extraction were obtained by pulmonary artery catheter, by the renal vein thermodilution technique and by renal extraction of (51)Cr-ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid ((51)Cr-EDTA), respectively.ResultsAt target MAP of 75 mmHg, RDO(2) (13%), GFR (27%) and urine flow were higher and renal oxygen extraction was lower (-7.4%) compared with at target MAP of 60 mmHg. However, the renal variables did not differ when compared at target MAPs of 75 and 90 mmHg. Cardiac index increased dose-dependently with NE.ConclusionsRestoration of MAP from 60 to 75 mmHg improves renal oxygen delivery, GFR and the renal oxygen supply/demand relationship in post-cardiac surgery patients with vasodilatory shock and AKI. This pressure-dependent renal perfusion, filtration and oxygenation at levels of MAP below 75 mmHg reflect a more or less exhausted renal autoregulatory reserve.

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