During CPB, PL and HS did not cause a significant metabolic acidosis. There was hyperacetatemia and hypergluconatemia with PL and hyperchloremia and hyperlactatemia with HS. These physiochemical effects appear clinically innocuous.
A total of 29 patients with well-compensated alcoholic cirrhosis and 9 healthy control subjects of similar age and sex were studied to assess their response to a challenge of 2 L of normal saline infused over a 1 hr period. Patients with cirrhosis had an adequate effective arterial blood volume in the basal state as assessed by neurohumoral markers of vascular filling. They also had a lower renal vascular resistance (p = 0.048) and a higher glomerular filtration rate (p = 0.014) than the controls, indicating the presence of renal vasodilation. Both groups were in sodium balance, but the patients with cirrhosis had a higher filtered load of sodium, an increased proximal tubular reabsorption of sodium (p = 0.015) and a decreased fractional excretion of sodium (p < 0.001). The administration of a saline load was not accompanied by any significant changes in the renal circulation in the patients with cirrhosis. They were unable to suppress their proximal tubular reabsorption of sodium to the same extent as the controls (p = 0.012), so by the fourth hour a significant difference in the rate of urinary excretion of sodium was evident. In the patients with cirrhosis, glomerular filtration rate before and after the saline load correlated significantly with indocyanine green extraction (r = 0.65; p = 0.002), whereas the tubular handling of sodium was dependent on antipyrine clearance (r = 0.80; p < 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Renal sodium handling, assessed by the response to acute saline loading, was investigated in 14 well-compensated, nonascitic alcoholic cirrhotics and six normal controls. Urinary sodium excretion in cirrhotic patients (199 +/- 141 mumoles per min) was significantly lower than in controls (387 +/- 104 mumoles per min; p less than 0.01) at 3 hr postinfusion. In contrast to controls, renal plasma flow and glomerular filtration rate did not increase in the cirrhotics in response to acute saline loading. Proximal fractional reabsorption of sodium was estimated by clearance techniques in the presence of a hypotonic diuresis. Cirrhotic subjects with impaired functional liver cell mass as assessed by antipyrine clearance were unable to decrease proximal fractional reabsorption of sodium significantly in response to saline loading. Assessment in the cirrhotics included measurement of hepatic vein pressure gradient, indocyanine green extraction ratio, indocyanine green clearance, and antipyrine clearance as indices of portal pressure, intrahepatic shunting, hepatic blood flow and functional hepatocellular mass, respectively. Urinary sodium excretion in the cirrhotics correlated strongly with antipyrine clearance (r = 0.839, p less than 0.0001) and weakly with portal pressure (r = 0.562, p = 0.037). No correlation was seen with the other indices of hepatic blood flow and shunting. The findings of this study suggest that alcoholic cirrhosis is associated with a decline in hepatocellular function which results in either a decreased clearance of a salt-retaining hormone or decreased synthesis of a natriuretic hormone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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