Capillary refill time response to a fluid challenge or a vasopressor test: an observational, proof-of-concept study - 08/01/26
, Emilio Daniel Valenzuela 1, Eduardo Kattan 1, Ricardo Castro 1, Camila Guzmán 1, Alicia Elzo Kraemer 1, Nicolás Sarzosa 1, Leyla Alegría 1, Roberto Contreras 1, Vanessa Oviedo 1, Sebastián Bravo 1, Dagoberto Soto 1, Claudia Sáez 2, Hafid Ait-Oufella 3, Gustavo Ospina-Tascón 4, 5, 6, Jan Bakker 1, 7Abstract |
Background |
Several studies have validated capillary refill time (CRT) as a marker of tissue hypoperfusion, and recent guidelines recommend CRT monitoring during septic shock resuscitation. Therefore, it is relevant to further explore its kinetics of response to short-term hemodynamic interventions with fluids or vasopressors. A couple of previous studies explored the impact of a fluid bolus on CRT, but little is known about the impact of norepinephrine on CRT when aiming at a higher mean arterial pressure (MAP) target in septic shock. We designed this observational study to further evaluate the effect of a fluid challenge (FC) and a vasopressor test (VPT) on CRT in septic shock patients with abnormal CRT after initial resuscitation. Our purpose was to determine the effects of a FC in fluid-responsive patients, and of a VPT aimed at a higher MAP target in chronically hypertensive fluid-unresponsive patients on the direction and magnitude of CRT response.
Methods |
Thirty-four septic shock patients were included. Fluid responsiveness was assessed at baseline, and a FC (500 ml/30 mins) was administered in 9 fluid-responsive patients. A VPT was performed in 25 patients by increasing norepinephrine dose to reach a MAP to 80–85 mmHg for 30 min. Patients shared a multimodal perfusion and hemodynamic monitoring protocol with assessments at at least two time-points (baseline, and at the end of interventions).
Results |
CRT decreased significantly with both tests (from 5 [3.5–7.6] to 4 [2.4–5.1] sec, p = 0.008 after the FC; and from 4.0 [3.3–5.6] to 3 [2.6 -5] sec, p = 0.03 after the VPT. A CRT-response was observed in 7/9 patients after the FC, and in 14/25 pts after the VPT, but CRT deteriorated in 4 patients on this latter group, all of them receiving a concomitant low-dose vasopressin.
Conclusions |
Our findings support that fluid boluses may improve CRT or produce neutral effects in fluid-responsive septic shock patients with persistent hypoperfusion. Conversely, raising NE doses to target a higher MAP in previously hypertensive patients elicits a more heterogeneous response, improving CRT in the majority, but deteriorating skin perfusion in some patients, a fact that deserves further research.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Capillary refill time, Septic shock, Fluid challenge, Vasopressor test, Perfusion.
Plan
Vol 14 - N° 1
Article 49- 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
