A prospective study was conducted on 34 stable septic patients to determine whether mild hyperlactatemia is a marker of lactate overproduction or an indicator of lactate underutilization during sepsis. Plasma lactate clearance and lactate production were evaluated by modeling the lactate kinetic induced by an infusion of 1 mmol/kg L-lactate over 15 min. The patients were divided in two groups depending on their blood lactate: < or = 1.5 mmol/L (n = 20, lactate = 1.2+/-0.2 mmol/L) or > or = 2 mmol/L (n = 10, lactate = 2.6+/-0.6 mmol/L). The hyperlactatemic patients had a lower lactate clearance (473+/-102 ml/kg/h) than those with normal blood lactate (1,002+/-284 ml/kg/h, p < 0.001), whereas lactate production in the two groups was similar (1,194+/-230 and 1,181+/-325 micromol/kg/h, p = 0.90). A second analysis including all the patients confirmed that the blood lactate concentration was closely linked to the reciprocal of lactate clearance (r2 = 0.73, p < 0.001) but not to lactate production (r2 = 0.03, p = 0.29). We conclude that a mild hyperlactatemia occurring in a stable septic patient is mainly due to a defect in lactate utilization.
Low lactate clearance in severely ill septic patients with normal or mildly elevated blood lactate is predictive of poor outcome independently of other known risk factors such as age and number of organ failures.
Continuous venovenous hemofiltration with dialysis cannot mask lactate overproduction, and its blood concentration remains a reliable marker of tissue oxygenation in patients receiving this renal replacement technique.
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