2016
DOI: 10.1097/aco.0000000000000280
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The response of the microcirculation to cardiac surgery

Abstract: Direct visualization of the microcirculation using hand-held microscopy may provide the clinician the physiological feedback that is required for the early diagnosis and treatment of microcirculatory alterations during cardiac surgery. The coherence between the hemodynamic response of the macrocirculation and microcirculation during surgery seems to be essential.

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Cited by 34 publications
(29 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Even though global hemodynamics were comparable between patients with and without successful weaning, microcirculatory parameters were significantly different. The occurrence of such disassociation between macro-circulation and microcirculation, referred to as a loss of hemodynamic coherence, has been described before in other conditions of cardiovascular compromise [ 11 , 23 28 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Even though global hemodynamics were comparable between patients with and without successful weaning, microcirculatory parameters were significantly different. The occurrence of such disassociation between macro-circulation and microcirculation, referred to as a loss of hemodynamic coherence, has been described before in other conditions of cardiovascular compromise [ 11 , 23 28 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Therefore, these patients may have had different microcirculation properties prior to presentation. Another limitation was the exclusion of patients dying within 24 h. Fourth, apart from global hemodynamics, VA-ECMO can adversely affect the microcirculation for many reasons such as hemodilution, hemolysis, coagulopathy, non-pulsatile flow, and hypothermia [38]. T1 measurements were performed within 24 h after the initiation of VA-ECMO, which can be considered a long time period.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Variants of impaired microcirculation include impaired microcirculatory perfusion where obstructed capillaries are observed next to capillaries with flow, often seen in clinical conditions such as sepsis or reperfusion injury; microcirculatory alterations characterized by increased diffusion distance between oxygen-carrying red blood cells and tissue cells, often seen in hemodilution that accompanies cardiopulmonary bypass; microcirculatory tamponade, often associated with excessive use of vasopressors and/or increased venous pressure. This fluid overload causes tissue edema that consequently leads to a damage of endothelial cells and losses of hemodynamic coherence, glycocalyx barriers, and/or the compromise of adherence and tight junctions [45].…”
Section: Impaired Endothelium-dependent Vascular Function In the Clinmentioning
confidence: 99%