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Oxygen transport characterization of a human model of progressive hemorrhage
Authors:Kevin R. Ward  Mohamad H. Tiba  Kathy L. Ryan  Caroline A. Rickards  Babs R. Soller  Victor A. Convertino
Affiliation:a Virginia Commonwealth University Reanimation Engineering Shock Center (VCURES), 1201 East Marshall Street, P.O. Box 980401, Richmond, VA 23298, United States
b Virginia Commonwealth University Department of Emergency Medicine, 1201 East Marshall Street, P.O. Box 980401, Richmond, VA 23298, United States
c Virginia Commonwealth University Department of Physiology and Biophysics, 1101 East Marshal Street, P.O. Box 980551, Richmond, VA 23298, United States
d Virginia Commonwealth University Center for the Study of Biologic Complexity, 1000 West Cary Street, P.O. Box 842030, Richmond, VA 23284, United States
e U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research (USAISR), 3400 Rawley E. Chambers Ave., Ft. Sam, Houston, TX 78234, United States
f Department of Anesthesiology, University of Massachusetts Medical School, 55 Lake Avenue North, Worcester, MA 01655, United States
g Department of Pediatrics, Division of Clinical Research, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, P.O. Box 016820, Miami, FL 33101, United States
Abstract:

Background

Hemorrhage continues to be a leading cause of death from trauma sustained both in combat and in the civilian setting. New models of hemorrhage may add value in both improving our understanding of the physiologic responses to severe bleeding and as platforms to develop and test new monitoring and therapeutic techniques. We examined changes in oxygen transport produced by central volume redistribution in humans using lower body negative pressure (LBNP) as a potential mimetic of hemorrhage.

Methods and results

In 20 healthy volunteers, systemic oxygen delivery and oxygen consumption, skeletal muscle oxygenation and oral mucosa perfusion were measured over increasing levels of LBNP to the point of hemodynamic decompensation. With sequential reductions in central blood volume, progressive reductions in oxygen delivery and tissue oxygenation and perfusion parameters were noted, while no changes were observed in systemic oxygen uptake or markers of anaerobic metabolism in the blood (e.g., lactate, base excess). While blood pressure decreased and heart rate increased during LBNP, these changes occurred later than the reductions in tissue oxygenation and perfusion.

Conclusions

These findings indicate that LBNP induces changes in oxygen transport consistent with the compensatory phase of hemorrhage, but that a frank state of shock (delivery-dependent oxygen consumption) does not occur. LBNP may therefore serve as a model to better understand a variety of compensatory physiological changes that occur during the pre-shock phase of hemorrhage in conscious humans. As such, LBNP may be a useful platform from which to develop and test new monitoring capabilities for identifying the need for intervention during the early phases of hemorrhage to prevent a patient's progression to overt shock.
Keywords:Hemorrhage   Lower body negative pressure   Trauma   Tissue oxygenation   Combat casualty   Monitoring
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