Monitoring of the microcirculation in children undergoing major abdominal and thoracic surgery: A pilot study

接受腹部和胸部大型手术的儿童微循环监测:一项初步研究

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作者:Marie Wagner, Eveline Anzinger, Florian Hey, Karl Reiter, Julius Z Wermelt, Belén Pastor-Villaescusa, Orsolya Genzel-Boroviczény, Claudia Nussbaum

Background

Monitoring of the macrocirculation during surgery provides limited information on the quality of organ perfusion.

Conclusion

Perioperative microcirculatory monitoring in children requires a high amount of personal and logistic resources still limiting its routine use. Major surgery is associated with microvascular alterations and glycocalyx perturbation. The possible consequences on patient outcome need further evaluation. Efforts should concentrate on the development of next generation devices designed to facilitate microcirculatory monitoring in children.

Methods

Sublingual microvessels were visualized by handheld videomicroscopy in 11 children (19 mo - 10 yrs) undergoing surgery > 120 min at four time points: T0) after induction of anesthesia; T1) before end of anesthesia, T2) 6 h post surgery and T3) 24 h post surgery.

Objective

We investigated the feasibility of perioperative microcirculatory measurements in children.

Results

Measurements were feasible in all children at T0 and T1. At T2 and T3, imaging was restricted to 6 and 4 infants, respectively, due to respiratory compromise and missing cooperation. The capillary density was reduced at T1 compared to T0 (8.1 mm/mm2 [4.0-17.0] vs. 10.6 mm/mm2 [5.1-19.3]; p = 0.01), and inversely related to norepinephrine dose (Pearson r = -0.65; p = 0.04). Microvascular flow and serum glycocalyx makers Syndecan-1 and Hyaluronan increased significantly from T0 to T1.

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