Objective: To assess left ventricular (LV) contractile function and adrenergic responsiveness in septic patients.
Methods: We used echocardiographically defined fractional area of contraction (FAC), and LV area to end-systolic arterial pressure estimates of end-systolic elastance (E'es) and its change in response to dobutamine (5 microg/kg/min) in 10 subjects in septic shock admitted to an intensive care unit of an academic medical center. Subjects were studied on admission and again at both 5 days and 8-10 days after admission.
Results: Three of the 10 subjects died as a result of their acute process, while the others were discharged from hospital. Nine out of 10 subjects required intravenous vasopressor therapy on day 1, while only 1 of 9 subjects required vasopressor support at day 5. LV end-diastolic area (EDA) increased from day 1 to day 5 and days 8-10 (p<0.05), but neither FAC nor E'es was altered by time (EDA 15.7+/-5.8, 21.4+/-5.1, and 19.4+/-5.6 cm2; FAC 0.46+/-0.19, 0.50+/-0.20, and 0.48+/-0.15%; E'es 21.6+/-12.6, 23.2+/-8.5, and 19.2+/-6.3 mmHg/cm2, mean+/-SD, for days 1, 5 and 8-10 respectively). Although dobutamine did not alter E'es on day 1 or day 5, E'es increased in all of the 5 subjects studied on days 8-10 (p<0.05).
Conclusions: Adrenergic hyporesponsiveness is present in septic shock and persists for at least 5 days into recovery, resolving by days 8-10 in survivors.