Precision Automated Critical Care Management: Closed-loop critical care for the treatment of distributive shock in a swine model of ischemia-reperfusion.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

From the Department of Surgery (A.S.G., N.T.P.P.), Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist; Wake Forest University School of Medicine (A.P.W.); Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery (M.R.L., J.E.J.), Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Department of Emergency Medicine (M.A.J.), University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah; Division of Pulmonary, Department of Internal Medicine (J.Y.A.) Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, California; Section of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery (L.P.N.); and Department of Vascular/Endovascular Surgery (T.K.W.), Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Winston-Salem, North Carolina.

Published: October 2023

Background: Goal-directed blood pressure management in the intensive care unit can improve trauma outcomes but is labor-intensive. Automated critical care systems can deliver scaled interventions to avoid excessive fluid or vasopressor administration. We compared a first-generation automated drug and fluid delivery platform, Precision Automated Critical Care Management (PACC-MAN), to a more refined algorithm, incorporating additional physiologic inputs and therapeutics. We hypothesized that the enhanced algorithm would achieve equivalent resuscitation endpoints with less crystalloid utilization in the setting of distributive shock.

Methods: Twelve swine underwent 30% hemorrhage and 30 minutes of aortic occlusion to induce an ischemia-reperfusion injury and distributive shock state. Next, animals were transfused to euvolemia and randomized into a standardized critical care (SCC) of PACC-MAN or an enhanced version (SCC+) for 4.25 hours. SCC+ incorporated lactate and urine output to assess global response to resuscitation and added vasopressin as an adjunct to norepinephrine at certain thresholds. Primary and secondary outcomes were decreased crystalloid administration and time at goal blood pressure, respectively.

Results: Weight-based fluid bolus volume was lower in SCC+ compared with SCC (26.9 mL/kg vs. 67.5 mL/kg, p = 0.02). Cumulative norepinephrine dose required was not significantly different (SCC+: 26.9 μg/kg vs. SCC: 13.76 μg/kg, p = 0.24). Three of 6 animals (50%) in SCC+ triggered vasopressin as an adjunct. Percent time spent between 60 mm Hg and 70 mm Hg, terminal creatinine and lactate, and weight-adjusted cumulative urine output were equivalent.

Conclusion: Refinement of the PACC-MAN algorithm decreased crystalloid administration without sacrificing time in normotension, reducing urine output, increasing vasopressor support, or elevating biomarkers of organ damage. Iterative improvements in automated critical care systems to achieve target hemodynamics in a distributive-shock model are feasible.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10545062PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000004054DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

critical care
24
automated critical
16
urine output
12
precision automated
8
care management
8
distributive shock
8
blood pressure
8
care systems
8
vasopressin adjunct
8
decreased crystalloid
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!