In a Canine Model of Septic Shock, Cardiomyopathy Occurs Independent of Catecholamine Surges and Cardiac Microvascular Ischemia

Author:

Ford Verity J.1ORCID,Applefeld Willard N.12,Wang Jeffrey13ORCID,Sun Junfeng1,Solomon Steven B.1ORCID,Klein Harvey G.4ORCID,Feng Jing1,Lertora Juan5ORCID,Parizi‐Torabi Parizad6ORCID,Danner Robert L.1ORCID,Solomon Michael A.16ORCID,Chen Marcus Y.6ORCID,Natanson Charles16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Critical Care Medicine Department, Clinical Center National Institutes of Health Bethesda MD USA

2. Division of Cardiology Duke University Medical Center Durham NC USA

3. Emory University Atlanta GA USA

4. Department of Transfusion Medicine, Clinical Center National Institutes of Health Bethesda MD USA

5. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Louisiana State University Baton Rouge LA USA

6. National Heart Lung and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health Bethesda MD USA

Abstract

Background High levels of catecholamines are cardiotoxic and associated with stress‐induced cardiomyopathies. Using a septic shock model that reproduces the reversible cardiomyopathy seen over 10 days associated with human septic shock, we investigated the effects of catecholamines on microcirculatory perfusion and cardiac dysfunction. Methods and Results Purpose‐bred beagles received intrabronchial Staphylococcus aureus (n=30) or saline (n=6). The septic animals were than randomized to epinephrine (1 μg/kg per minute, n=15) or saline (n=15) infusions from 4 to 44 hours. Serial cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, catecholamine levels, and troponins were collected over 92 hours. Serial adenosine‐stress perfusion cardiac magnetic resonance imaging was performed on septic animals randomized to receive saline (n=8 out of 15) or epinephrine (n=8 out of 15). High‐dose sedation was given to suppress endogenous catecholamine release. Despite catecholamine levels largely remaining within the normal range throughout, by 48 hours, septic animals receiving saline versus nonseptic animals still developed significant worsening of left ventricular ejection fraction, circumferential strain, and ventricular‐aortic coupling. In septic animals that received epinephrine versus saline infusions, plasma epinephrine levels increased 800‐fold, but epinephrine produced no significant further worsening of left ventricular ejection fraction, circumferential strain, or ventricular‐aortic coupling. Septic animals receiving saline had a significant increase in microcirculatory reserve without troponin elevations. Septic animals receiving epinephrine had decreased edema, blunted microcirculatory perfusion, and elevated troponin levels that persisted for hours after the epinephrine infusion stopped. Conclusions Cardiac dysfunction during sepsis is not primarily due to elevated endogenous or exogenous catecholamines nor due to decreased microvascular perfusion‐induced ischemia. However, epinephrine itself has potentially harmful long‐lasting ischemic effects during sepsis including impaired cardiac microvascular perfusion that persists after stopping the infusion.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

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