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Microcirculatory tissue perfusion during general anaesthesia and noncardiac surgery: An observational study using incident dark field imaging with automated video analysis

Flick, Moritz; Schreiber, Tim-Henrik; Montomoli, Jonathan; Krause, Linda; de Boer, Hans D; Kouz, Karim; Scheeren, Thomas W L; Ince, Can; Hilty, Matthias P; Saugel, Bernd (2022). Microcirculatory tissue perfusion during general anaesthesia and noncardiac surgery: An observational study using incident dark field imaging with automated video analysis. European Journal of Anaesthesiology, 39(7):582-590.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Handheld vital microscopy allows direct observation of red blood cells within the sublingual microcirculation. Automated analysis allows quantifying microcirculatory tissue perfusion variables - including tissue red blood cell perfusion (tRBCp), a functional variable integrating microcirculatory convection and diffusion capacities.

OBJECTIVE

We aimed to describe baseline microcirculatory tissue perfusion in patients presenting for elective noncardiac surgery and test that microcirculatory tissue perfusion is preserved during elective general anaesthesia for noncardiac surgery.

DESIGN

Prospective observational study.

SETTING

University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.

PATIENTS

120 elective noncardiac surgery patients (major abdominal, orthopaedic or trauma and minor urologic surgery) and 40 young healthy volunteers.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES

We measured sublingual microcirculation using incident dark field imaging with automated analysis at baseline before induction of general anaesthesia, under general anaesthesia before surgical incision and every 30 min during surgery. We used incident the dark field imaging technology with a validated automated analysis software.

RESULTS

A total of 3687 microcirculation video sequences were analysed. Microcirculatory tissue perfusion variables varied substantially between individuals - but ranges were similar between patients and volunteers. Under general anaesthesia before surgical incision, there were no important changes in tRBCp, functional capillary density and capillary haematocrit compared with preinduction baseline. However, total vessel density was higher and red blood cell velocity and the proportion of perfused vessels were lower under general anaesthesia. There were no important changes in any microcirculatory tissue perfusion variables during surgery.

CONCLUSION

In patients presenting for elective noncardiac surgery, baseline microcirculatory tissue perfusion variables vary substantially between individuals - but ranges are similar to those in young healthy volunteers. Microcirculatory tissue perfusion is preserved during general anaesthesia and noncardiac surgery - when macrocirculatory haemodynamics are maintained.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > University Hospital Zurich > Institute of Intensive Care Medicine
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Scopus Subject Areas:Health Sciences > Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Language:English
Date:1 July 2022
Deposited On:06 Oct 2022 06:32
Last Modified:27 Dec 2024 02:43
Publisher:Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
ISSN:0265-0215
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1097/EJA.0000000000001699
PubMed ID:35759291

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