Antioxidant therapy in critical care--is the microcirculation the primary target?

Crit Care Med

Department of Biological Chemistry and Nutrition, University Hohenheim, Germany.

Published: September 2007

AI Article Synopsis

  • The review discusses the therapeutic potential of antioxidants, particularly vitamin C, for critically ill patients experiencing cardiovascular shock.
  • It highlights that oxidative stress contributes to systemic inflammatory responses, which can lead to severe complications like organ failure.
  • Evidence suggests that high-dose vitamin C improves nitric oxide bioavailability and mitigates complications from severe conditions, supporting its use in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

This review presents the rationale for the therapeutic use of antioxidants in treating critically ill patients; it is not a systematic review of the clinical evidence that has been assessed recently by others. Clinical and nonclinical evidence is presented to support the notion that natural antioxidants are of therapeutic value in treating cardiovascular shock. Oxidative stress is a major promoter and mediator of the systemic inflammatory response. The microcirculation is particularly susceptible to oxidative stress that causes hemodynamic instability, leading to multiple organ failure due to systemic inflammatory response syndrome. Vitamin C is the antioxidant used experimentally to demonstrate oxidative stress as a key pathophysiologic factor in septic shock. Pharmacologic studies reveal that vitamin C (as ascorbate), at supraphysiologic doses, significantly affects the bioavailability of nitric oxide during acute inflammation, including inhibiting nitric oxide synthetase induction. Parenteral high-dose vitamin C inhibits endotoxin-induced endothelial dysfunction and vasohyporeactivity in humans and reverses sepsis-induced suppression of microcirculatory control in rodents. In severe burn injury, in both animals and patients, parenteral high-dose vitamin C significantly reduces resuscitation fluid volumes. Therefore, a significant body of pharmacologic evidence and sound preliminary clinical evidence supports the biological feasibility of using the exemplary antioxidant, vitamin C, in the treatment of the critically ill.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/01.CCM.0000278598.95294.C5DOI Listing

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