Endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan improves microcirculatory blood flow in splanchnic organs in septic shock
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Critical Care Medicine
- Vol. 31 (1), 203-210
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00003246-200301000-00031
Abstract
Splanchnic ischemia is believed to play an important role in the development of multiple organ dysfunction in septic shock. The vasoconstrictor peptide endothelin can produce an intense and sustained splanchnic vasoconstriction and is increased in sepsis. The aim of this investigation was to study the effects of an endothelin antagonist on microcirculatory blood flow in multiple abdominal organs during septic shock. Prospective, controlled animal study. University-affiliated research laboratory. Fifteen anesthetized and mechanically ventilated pigs. Septic shock was induced by fecal peritonitis. After 120 mins of sepsis, eight animals received 10 mg/kg bosentan intravenously followed by an intravenous infusion at 5 mg x kg-1 x hr-1 whereas seven (controls) received isotonic saline. At 240 mins after induction of sepsis both groups received hydroxyethyl starch, 20 mL/kg intravenously, to convert hypodynamic septic shock to hyperdynamic sepsis. Microcirculatory blood flow was measured simultaneously and continuously in the jejunal muscularis, pancreas, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, and gastric, jejunal, and colon mucosa by using a multiple-channel laser Doppler flow meter. After 120 mins, all animals had developed signs of hypodynamic sepsis with decreased cardiac index, mean arterial blood pressure, and gastric mucosal pH. Microcirculatory blood flow in the pancreas and liver had decreased by 20% and in the jejunal muscularis by >40% (p <.01) whereas it remained virtually unchanged in the gastric, jejunal, and colonic mucosa. After 240 mins, cardiac index, mean arterial blood pressure, gastric mucosal pH, and microcirculatory blood flow in the gastric mucosa, colon mucosa, jejunal muscularis, and pancreas had all deteriorated in the controls, whereas in the bosentan-treated group, cardiac index and microcirculatory blood flow in the pancreas, gastric, and colon mucosa improved. During hyperdynamic sepsis, cardiac index increased above baseline in both groups but significantly more in the bosentan group. In the control group, microcirculatory flow returned to baseline in most tissues except in skeletal muscle and jejunal muscularis. In the bosentan group, microcirculatory flow returned to or increased above baseline in all tissues except in the muscularis of the jejunum. The endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan significantly improved microcirculatory blood flow in many splanchnic organs and in peripheral tissues during septic shock. The results of this study are consistent with the hypothesis that endothelin plays an important role in the regulation of microcirculatory blood flow in splanchnic as well as in peripheral tissues during septic shock.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dynamic study of the distribution of microcirculatory blood flow in multiple splanchnic organs in septic shockCritical Care Medicine, 2000
- The endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan restores gut oxygen delivery and reverses intestinal mucosal acidosis in porcine endotoxin shockGut, 1998
- Sepsis/septic shockCritical Care Medicine, 1996
- Endothelin-1 induces neutrophil-independent vascular injury in the rat gastric microcirculationEuropean Journal of Pharmacology, 1995
- Splanchnic tonometry: a review of physiology, methodology, and clinical applicationsJournal of Critical Care, 1994
- Regional blood flow and oxygen transport in septic shockCritical Care Medicine, 1993
- Intestinal platelet trapping after traumatic and septic shock. An early sign of sepsis and multiorgan failure in critically ill patients?Critical Care Medicine, 1992
- Evidence for Release of Endothelin-1 in Pigs and HumansJournal of Cardiovascular Pharmacology, 1991
- A novel potent vasoconstrictor peptide produced by vascular endothelial cellsNature, 1988
- The obligatory role of endothelial cells in the relaxation of arterial smooth muscle by acetylcholineNature, 1980