Increased endogenous carbon monoxide production in severe sepsis

Zegdi, R; Perrin, D; Burdin, M; Boiteau, R; Tenaillon, A

HERO ID

37461

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2002

Language

English

PMID

12107688

HERO ID 37461
In Press No
Year 2002
Title Increased endogenous carbon monoxide production in severe sepsis
Authors Zegdi, R; Perrin, D; Burdin, M; Boiteau, R; Tenaillon, A
Journal Intensive Care Medicine
Volume 28
Issue 6
Page Numbers 793-796
Abstract OBJECTIVE: A comparison was made between the endogenous carbon monoxide (CO) production in mechanically ventilated critically ill adult patients with, and those without, severe sepsis. DESIGN: Prospective comparative study. SETTING: Medical ICU in a community hospital. PATIENTS: Twenty-four patients with severe sepsis of various etiologies and five control patients with varying diagnoses. INTERVENTION: CO concentration was determined with an infrared CO analyzer on exhaled breath collected at the outlet of the ventilator. Endogenous CO production was estimated by the lung CO excretion rate measured at steady state. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS:: Endogenous CO production was higher in the sepsis group during the first 3 days of treatment in comparison to the control group (10.9+/-5 (SD) microl/kg per h on day 1, 7.8+/-4.9 microl/kg per h on day 2 and 6.9+/-4.7 microl/kg per h on day 3 versus 2.1+/-0.5 microl/kg per h; p<0.01 for each comparison). Survivors of sepsis had a significantly higher endogenous CO production on day 1 compared to non-survivors (14.7+/-5.3 versus 8.5+/-3.3 microl/kg per h; p=0.02). CONCLUSION: Endogenous CO production was significantly higher in mechanically ventilated patients suffering from severe sepsis. Further studies are required in order to determine the mechanism(s) and the functional significance of this increase.
Doi 10.1007/s00134-002-1269-7
Pmid 12107688
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments ECRIB.Intensive Care Med. 28: 793-796.
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Qa No