Impaired cerebrovascular autoregulation in patients with severe sepsis and sepsis-associated delirium
Open Access
- 4 October 2012
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Critical Care
- Vol. 16 (5), R181
- https://doi.org/10.1186/cc11665
Abstract
Introduction: Sepsis-associated delirium (SAD) increases morbidity in septic patients and, therefore, factors contributing to SAD should be further characterized. One possible mechanism might be the impairment of cerebrovascular autoregulation (AR) by sepsis, leading to cerebral hypo- or hyperperfusion in these haemodynamically unstable patients. Therefore, the present study investigates the relationship between the incidence of SAD and the status of AR during sepsis. Methods: Cerebral blood flow velocity was measured using transcranial Doppler sonography and was correlated with the invasive arterial blood pressure curve to calculate the index of AR Mx (Mx>0.3 indicates impaired AR). Mx was measured daily during the first 4 days of sepsis. Diagnosis of a SAD was performed using the confusion assessment method for ICU (CAM-ICU) and, furthermore the predominant brain electrical activity in electroencephalogram (EEG) both at day 4 after reduction of sedation to RASS >-2. Results: 30 critically ill adult patients with severe sepsis or septic shock (APACHE II 32 ± 6) were included. AR was impaired at day 1 in 60%, day 2 in 59%, day 3 in 41% and day 4 in 46% of patients; SAD detected by CAM-ICU was present in 76 % of patients. Impaired AR at day 1 was associated with the incidence of SAD at day 4 (p = 0.035). Conclusions: AR is impaired in the great majority of patients with severe sepsis during the first two days. Impaired AR is associated with SAD, suggesting that dysfunction of AR is one of the trigger mechanisms contributing to the development of SAD. Trial registration: clinicalTrials.gov ID NCT01029080Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Delirium duration and mortality in lightly sedated, mechanically ventilated intensive care patients*Critical Care Medicine, 2010
- Cerebral microcirculation is impaired during sepsis: an experimental studyCritical Care, 2010
- The neuroinflammatory hypothesis of deliriumActa Neuropathologica, 2010
- Sepsis-associated encephalopathy and its differential diagnosisCritical Care Medicine, 2009
- Sepsis causes neuroinflammation and concomitant decrease of cerebral metabolismJournal of Neuroinflammation, 2008
- Cerebral perfusion in sepsis-associated deliriumCritical Care, 2008
- Sepsis-associated deliriumIntensive Care Medicine, 2007
- Brain lesions in septic shock: a magnetic resonance imaging studyIntensive Care Medicine, 2007
- The Neuropathology of Septic ShockBrain Pathology, 2004
- Dysfunction of vasomotor reactivity in severe sepsis and septic shockIntensive Care Medicine, 2001