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Pulmonary lactate release in patients with acute lung injury is not attributable to lung tissue hypoxia
Authors:Routsi C  Bardouniotou H  Delivoria-Ioannidou V  Kazi D  Roussos C  Zakynthinos S
Institution:Department of Critical Care and Pulmonary Services, Medical School of Athens University, Evangelismos Hospital, Greece.
Abstract:OBJECTIVE: To determine whether pulmonary lactate production in patients with acute lung injury is attributable to lung tissue hypoxia. DESIGN: Prospective, controlled, clinical study. SETTING: A multidisciplinary university intensive care unit in a general hospital. PATIENTS: Seventy consecutive critically ill patients requiring mechanical ventilation and invasive hemodynamic monitoring. Of these patients, 18 had no acute lung injury (no ALI); 33 had acute lung injury (ALI) (Lung Injury Score LIS] < or =2.5); and 19 had acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) (LIS >2.5). INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: After hemodynamic measurements, lactate and pyruvate concentrations were assessed in simultaneously drawn arterial (a) and mixed venous (v) blood samples. Pulmonary lactate release was calculated as the product of transpulmonary a-v lactate difference (La-v]) times the cardiac index. Two indices of anaerobic metabolism of the lung, i.e., the transpulmonary a-v difference of lactate pyruvate ratio (L/Pa-v]) and excess lactate formation across the lungs (XL), were calculated. L(a-v) and pulmonary lactate release were higher in patients with ARDS than in the other groups (p<.001), and they were also higher in patients with ALI compared with patients with no ALI (p<.001). In patients with ALI and ARDS (n = 52), pulmonary lactate release correlated significantly with LIS (r2 = .14, p<.01) and venous admixture (r2 = .13, p<.01). When all patients were lumped together (n = 70), pulmonary lactate release directly correlated with LIS (r2 = .30, p<.001), venous admixture (r2 = .26, p<.001), and P(A-a)O2 (r2 = .14, p<.01). Neither L/P(a-v) nor XL was significantly different among the three groups. CONCLUSION: The lungs of patients with ALI produce lactate that is proportional to the severity of lung injury. This lactate production does not seem to be attributable to lung tissue hypoxia.
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