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Lactate Arterial-Central Venous Gradient among COVID-19 Patients in ICU: A Potential Tool in the Clinical Practice

Nardi, Giuseppe
•
Sanson, Gianfranco
•
Tassinari, Lucia
altro
Schiraldi, Fernando
2020
  • journal article

Periodico
CRITICAL CARE RESEARCH AND PRACTICE
Abstract
Objective: In physiological conditions, arterial blood lactate concentration is equal to or lower than central venous blood lactate concentration. A reversal in this rate (i.e., higher lactate concentration in central venous blood), which could reflect a derangement in the mitochondrial metabolism of lung cells induced by inflammation, has been previously reported in patients with ARDS but has been never explored in COVID-19 patients. The aim of this study was to explore if the COVID-19-induced lung cell damage was mirrored by an arterial lactatemia higher than the central venous one; then if the administration of anti-inflammatory therapy (i.e., canakinumab 300mg subcutaneous) could normalize such abnormal lactate a-cv difference.Methods: A prospective cohort study was conducted, started on March 25, 2020, for a duration of 10 days, enrolling 21 patients affected by severe COVID-19 pneumonia undergoing mechanical ventilation consecutively admitted to the ICU of the Rimini Hospital, Italy. Arterial and central venous blood samples were contemporarily collected to calculate the difference between arterial and central venous lactate (Delta a-cv lactate) concentrations within 24h from tracheal intubation (T 0) and 24 hours after canakinumab administration (T 1).Results: At T 0, 19 of 21 (90.5%) patients showed a pathologic Delta a-cv lactate (median 0.15mmol/L; IQR 0.07-0.25). In the 13 patients undergoing canakinumab administration, at T 1, Delta a-cv lactate decreased in 92.3% of cases, the decrease being statistically significant (T 0: median 0.24, IQR 0.09-0.31mmol/L; T 1: median -0.01, IQR -0.08-0.04mmol/L; p=0.002).Conclusion: A reversed Delta a-cv lactate might be interpreted as one of the effects of COVID-19-related cytokine storm, which could reflect a derangement in the mitochondrial metabolism of lung cells induced by severe inflammation or other uncoupling mediators. In addition, Delta a-cv lactate decrease might also reflect the anti-inflammatory activity of canakinumab. Our preliminary findings need to be confirmed by larger outcome studies.
DOI
10.1155/2020/4743904
WOS
WOS:000578368000001
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2972496
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-85092660331
https://www.hindawi.com/journals/ccrp/2020/4743904/
Diritti
open access
license:creative commons
license uri:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
FVG url
https://arts.units.it/bitstream/11368/2972496/1/Critical Care Research and Practice 2020.pdf
Soggetti
  • Arterial lactate

  • central venous lactat...

  • COVID-19

  • pneumonia

  • ARDS

Web of Science© citazioni
9
Data di acquisizione
Mar 24, 2024
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