Hypervolemia suppresses dilutional anaemic injury in a rat model of haemodilution.

anaemia fluid therapy glycocalyx haemodilution kidney injury resuscitation

Journal

Journal of translational internal medicine
ISSN: 2450-131X
Titre abrégé: J Transl Int Med
Pays: Poland
ID NLM: 101673826

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Dec 2023
Historique:
medline: 15 11 2022
pubmed: 15 11 2022
entrez: 22 12 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Haemodilution leads to complications in clinical practice. It is exactly unknown whether this damage is caused by the fluid or by the stretching of the vascular bed. We aimed to compare two different haemodilution techniques at the same anaemic level. Normovolemic or hypervolemic haemodilution was performed on twelve adult male Wistar rats. In the normovolemic procedure, blood was withdrawn and instantaneously administered with similar amounts of 6% hydroxyethyl starch (HES 130/0.4). Fluid was administered without withdrawing blood in the hypervolemic procedure. In both models, a 25% haematocrit level was targeted and kept at this level for 90 min to deepen the anaemia effect. Besides haemodynamics measurement, renal function (creatinine, blood urea nitrogen) and injury (tissue norepinephrine, malondialdehyde) were evaluated. Also, systemic hypoxia (lactate), oxidative stress (malondialdehyde, ischaemia-modified albumin), inflammation (tumour necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-α]), osmotic stress, adrenal stress (norepinephrine, epinephrine), and vascular stretching (atrial natriuretic peptide [ANP]) were assessed. Arterial pressure in the normovolemic group was lower than in the hypervolemic group. Serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and lactate levels were higher in the normovolemic group. Tissue norepinephrine and malondialdehyde levels were higher in the normovolemic group. Serum ANP, malondialdehyde, ischaemia-modified albumin, free haemoglobin, syndecan-1, and TNF-α were higher in both groups compared to respective baseline. Normovolemic haemodilution may lead to hypoxic kidney injury. The hypervolemic state may be advantageous if fluid is to be administered. Thus, the effect of the fluid itself can be relatively masked.

Sections du résumé

Background and Objectives UNASSIGNED
Haemodilution leads to complications in clinical practice. It is exactly unknown whether this damage is caused by the fluid or by the stretching of the vascular bed. We aimed to compare two different haemodilution techniques at the same anaemic level.
Methods UNASSIGNED
Normovolemic or hypervolemic haemodilution was performed on twelve adult male Wistar rats. In the normovolemic procedure, blood was withdrawn and instantaneously administered with similar amounts of 6% hydroxyethyl starch (HES 130/0.4). Fluid was administered without withdrawing blood in the hypervolemic procedure. In both models, a 25% haematocrit level was targeted and kept at this level for 90 min to deepen the anaemia effect. Besides haemodynamics measurement, renal function (creatinine, blood urea nitrogen) and injury (tissue norepinephrine, malondialdehyde) were evaluated. Also, systemic hypoxia (lactate), oxidative stress (malondialdehyde, ischaemia-modified albumin), inflammation (tumour necrosis factor-alpha [TNF-α]), osmotic stress, adrenal stress (norepinephrine, epinephrine), and vascular stretching (atrial natriuretic peptide [ANP]) were assessed.
Results UNASSIGNED
Arterial pressure in the normovolemic group was lower than in the hypervolemic group. Serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and lactate levels were higher in the normovolemic group. Tissue norepinephrine and malondialdehyde levels were higher in the normovolemic group. Serum ANP, malondialdehyde, ischaemia-modified albumin, free haemoglobin, syndecan-1, and TNF-α were higher in both groups compared to respective baseline.
Conclusions UNASSIGNED
Normovolemic haemodilution may lead to hypoxic kidney injury. The hypervolemic state may be advantageous if fluid is to be administered. Thus, the effect of the fluid itself can be relatively masked.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38130643
doi: 10.2478/jtim-2022-0045
pii: jtim-2022-0045
pmc: PMC10732576
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

393-400

Informations de copyright

© 2023 Muzaffer Utku Cakir, Berna Yavuz-Aksu, Ugur Aksu, published by De Gruyter on behalf of Scholar Media Publishing.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Conflicts of Interest None declared.

Auteurs

Muzaffer Utku Cakir (MU)

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Istanbul, Istanbul 34134, Turkey.

Berna Yavuz-Aksu (B)

Duzen Laboratory Group, Biochemistry Section, Istanbul 34394, Turkey.

Ugur Aksu (U)

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Istanbul, Istanbul 34134, Turkey.

Classifications MeSH