Central venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide difference
Very interesting !!!
Objective: To test the hypothesis that, in resuscitated septic shock patients, central venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide difference
[P(cv-a)CO2]
may serve as a global index of tissue perfusion when the central venous oxygen saturation (ScvO2) goal value has already been reached.
It was a prospective observational study.
Patients: After early resuscitation in the emergency unit, 50 consecutive septic shock patients with ScvO2 > 70% were included immediately after their admission into the ICU (T0). Patients were separated according to a threshold of 6 mmHg at T0.
- Low P(cv-a)CO2 group (Low gap) - 26 patients and
- High P(cv-a)CO2 group (High gap) - 24 patients
Measurements were performed every 6 h over 12 h (T0, T6, T12)
Conclusion: In ICU-resuscitated patients, targeting only ScvO2 may not be sufficient to guide therapy. When the 70% ScvO2 goal-value is reached, the presence of a P(cv-a)CO2 larger than 6 mmHg might be a useful tool to identify patients who still remain inadequately resuscitated.
Reference: Click to get abstract
Central venous-to-arterial carbon dioxide difference: an additional target for goal-directed therapy in septic shock? - Intensive Care Medicine, Volume 34, Issue 12 / December , 2008- Pages 2218 - 2225