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肥胖诱导的肝脏低灌注会引发复苏后失血性休克后的肝功能障碍。

Obesity-induced hepatic hypoperfusion primes for hepatic dysfunction after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock.

作者信息

Matheson Paul J, Hurt Ryan T, Franklin Glen A, McClain Craig J, Garrison R Neal

机构信息

Department of Surgery, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY 40292, USA.

出版信息

Surgery. 2009 Oct;146(4):739-47; discussion 747-8. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2009.06.037.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Obese patients (BMI>35) after blunt trauma are at increased risk compared to non-obese for organ dysfunction, prolonged hospital stay, infection, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and mortality. Obesity and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) produce a low grade systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) with compromised hepatic blood flow, which increases with body mass index. We hypothesized that obesity further aggravates liver dysfunction by reduced hepatic perfusion following resuscitated hemorrhagic shock (HEM).

METHODS

Age-matched Zucker rats (Obese, 314-519 g & Lean, 211-280 g) were randomly assigned to 4 groups (n = 10-12/group): (1) Lean-Sham; (2) Lean, HEM, and resuscitation (HEM/RES); (3) Obese-Sham; and (4) Obese-HEM/RES. HEM was 40% of mean arterial pressure (MAP) for 60 min; RES was return of shed blood/5 min and 2 volumes of saline/25 min. Hepatic blood flow (HBF) using galactose clearance, liver enzymes and complete metabolic panel were measured over 4 h after completion of RES.

RESULTS

Obese rats had increased MAP, heart rate, and fasting blood glucose and BUN concentrations compared to lean controls, required less blood withdrawal (mL/g) to maintain 40% MAP, and RES did not restore BL MAP. Obese rats had decreased HBF at BL and during HEM/RES, which persisted 4 h post RES. ALT and BUN were increased compared to Lean-HEM/RES at 4 h post-RES.

CONCLUSION

These data suggest that obesity significantly contributes to trauma outcomes through compromised vascular control or through fat-induced sinusoidal compression to impair hepatic blood flow after HEM/RES resulting in a greater hepatic injury. The pro-inflammatory state of NAFLD seen in obesity appears to prime the liver for hepatic ischemia after resuscitated hemorrhagic shock, perhaps intensified by insidious and ongoing hepatic hypoperfusion established prior to the traumatic injury or shock.

摘要

背景

与非肥胖患者相比,钝性创伤后的肥胖患者(BMI>35)发生器官功能障碍、住院时间延长、感染、机械通气时间延长和死亡的风险增加。肥胖和非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)会产生低度全身炎症反应综合征(SIRS),同时肝血流量受损,且这种情况会随着体重指数的增加而加重。我们推测肥胖会因复苏性失血性休克(HEM)后肝灌注减少而进一步加重肝功能障碍。

方法

将年龄匹配的 Zucker 大鼠(肥胖,314 - 519 g;瘦型,211 - 280 g)随机分为 4 组(每组 n = 10 - 12):(1)瘦型 - 假手术组;(2)瘦型,失血性休克及复苏组(HEM/RES);(3)肥胖 - 假手术组;(4)肥胖 - HEM/RES 组。失血性休克为平均动脉压(MAP)的 40%,持续 60 分钟;复苏为回输 shed blood/5 分钟和 2 倍体积生理盐水/25 分钟。在复苏完成后 4 小时内,使用半乳糖清除率测量肝血流量(HBF),并检测肝酶和完整代谢指标。

结果

与瘦型对照组相比,肥胖大鼠的 MAP、心率、空腹血糖和血尿素氮浓度升高,维持 40% MAP 所需的失血量(mL/g)更少,且复苏后未恢复基础 MAP。肥胖大鼠在基础状态及 HEM/RES 期间的 HBF 降低,且在复苏后 4 小时持续存在。与瘦型 - HEM/RES 组相比,复苏后 4 小时肥胖大鼠的谷丙转氨酶(ALT)和血尿素氮升高。

结论

这些数据表明,肥胖通过血管控制受损或脂肪诱导的肝血窦受压,显著影响创伤结局,导致 HEM/RES 后肝血流量受损,进而造成更严重的肝损伤。肥胖中所见的 NAFLD 的促炎状态似乎使肝脏在复苏性失血性休克后更易发生肝缺血,这可能因创伤或休克前隐匿且持续的肝灌注不足而加剧。

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