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New conclusive data on human myocardial dysfunction induced by acidosis

Abstract

Acidosis is one of the major consequences of hemodynamic instability in shock state patients directly associated with multiple organ failure evolution and death. Most studies on the hemodynamic consequences of acidosis have been experimental, nonhuman studies with severe acidosis, and thus far from the most common clinical situations. Schotola and colleagues offer a new approach to human failing myocardium where the authors highlight, ex vivo, the deleterious hemodynamic consequences of mild acidosis. Their work strengthens the current view of the urgent need to discover new efficient and nondeleterious therapy for the treatment of acidosis.

During the shock state, understanding the mechanisms of acidosis, its hemodynamic and inflammatory consequences as well as the best therapeutic approach remain an ongoing debate. In the previous issue, Schotola and colleagues provide, for the first time, new and en-lightening data on the consequence of acidosis in isolated human failing myocardium [1].

Over the past two decades, the mortality rate from a shock state has decreased; for instance, in septic shock from 30% to around 20% [2, 3]. This improvement stems from many factors, including early management, more aggressive resuscitation with specific goals (volemic expansion, targeted main arterial pressure, blood transfusion, and so forth) and a better identification of prognostic factors such as acidosis [4]. As a major metabolic consequence of shock states, acidosis is also known to be a high predictor of in hospital mortality [5]. Both a cause and a consequence, this acidosis impairs cardiac and vascular function through various cellular and molecular mechanisms. Intracellular acidosis, which reduces myofilament sensitivity to Ca2+, is thus one of the crucial factors involved in myocardial dysfunction [6]. A low pH value also induces vessel hyporeactivity mediated by a number of factors such as nitric oxide, peroxynitrite, activation of KATP channels and modification of catecholamine signaling [7].

Although it has long been known that cardiovascular function is impaired by acidosis, the bulk of the studies have been mostly experimental, and only a few human studies have been relevant on this subject [810]. In the present study by Schotola and colleagues, the authors obtained ventricular trabeculae from human right ventricles explanted from failing hearts. These trabeculae were mounted in a chamber in which the development of isometric force was recorded and the tissues superfused with a HEPES solution at pH 7.20 and 7.40. The response to incremental doses of isoproterenol, a B mimetic agent, was also recorded. Their major finding was a reduction in cardiac contractility at pH 7.20 and a rightward shift of the pH 7.20 curve compared with the 7.40 curve in response to increasing doses of isoproterenol. Therefore, without providing actual new pathophysiological information regarding cardiac depression in acidotic patients, this study definitely confirms the deleterious effects of a moderate and common acidosis on the failing human heart. Obviously, these experimental conditions (that is, ex vivo fragments of myocardium, artificial organic acidosis) are far from the clinical situation. However, this study confirms all other previous results. Furthermore, given that the hemodynamic consequences of common mild acidosis on altered myocardium are important, physicians should be alarmed in the presence of severe acidosis. In shock patients, hemodynamic treatment in order to treat acidosis should be a primary goal for the physician. Finally, it would be of interest, albeit ethically complex, to determine whether this mild acidosis has the same impact not only on preserved human myocardium but also on both preserved and altered arterial vessels.

The management of acidosis remains a complex challenge. The main treatment must involve the correction of the underlying disease at the origin of acidosis. However, buffering severe acidosis by sodium bicarbonate is known to be associated with severe deleterious effects. One such effect is paradoxical intracellular acidosis. Bollaert and colleagues demonstrated that sodium bicarbonate infusion in acidotic rats decreases the intracellular pH [11]. Moreover, sodium bicarbonate infusion increases carbon dioxide, which is highly diffusible in cells (HCO3- + H+ <=> H2CO3 and H2CO3 <=> CO2 + H2O). Carbon dioxide increases dramatically and exacerbates cardiovascular dysfunction [12]. Another deleterious effect is that hypocalcemia is worsened by bicarbonate infusion, which probably also impairs cardiovascular function [9]. A final example is hydric and sodium overload, which often occurs during sodium bicarbonate infusion.

Two small randomized, controlled clinical studies describe the inefficiency of this treatment in restoring the hemodynamic balance in critically ill patients [9, 10]. Other treatments such as Carbicarb, an equimolar solution of sodium bicarbonate and sodium carbonate, or THAM (trometamol; tris-hydroxymethyl aminomethane), a biologically inert amino alcohol of low toxicity that buffers carbon dioxide and acids in vitro and in vivo, have also been studied for the treatment of metabolic or respiratory acidosis, although not in shock state patients [8, 13].

For all of these reasons, bicarbonate therapy is not recommended even with pH <7.15. In fact, the Surviving Sepsis Campaign guidelines only recommend against its use for pH ≥7.15 [4]. Currently, there are no relevant published studies regarding the effect of bicarbonate therapy for pH <7.15. Nevertheless, while the underlying disease remains the main course of treatment, there is an urgent need to research a new symptomatic approach to acidosis management.

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Correspondence to Bruno Levy.

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Kimmoun, A., Ducrocq, N. & Levy, B. New conclusive data on human myocardial dysfunction induced by acidosis. Crit Care 16, 160 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1186/cc11520

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