JAPANESE CIRCULATION JOURNAL
Online ISSN : 1347-4839
Print ISSN : 0047-1828
ISSN-L : 0047-1828
Analysis of Acute and Chronic Heart Failure in View of Hepatic Oxygen Supply-Demand Relationship Using Hepatic Venous Oxygen Saturation : SYMPOSIUM ON PATHOPHYSIOLOGY AND SEVERITY OF HEART FAILURE IN THE ASPECT OF CIRCULATORY INSUFFICIENCY
HIKARU MATSUDAHIROSHI TAKANOSUSUMU NAKANORHYOTA SHIRAKURAMASAKATU OHTANIKAZUHIRO TANIGUCHIYUJI MIYAMOTOSHIGEAKI OHTAKEYOSHIKI SAWANOBUYUKI TAENAKAYASUNARU KAWASHIMA
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1989 Volume 53 Issue 2 Pages 175-179

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Abstract
The adequacy of hepatic circulation in terms of oxygen supply-demand relation was assessed by measuring hepatic venous oxygen saturation (Shvo2) in patients. Among those with congenital cardiac lesions (n=11), , Shvo2 during the early postoperative period was markedly low as less than 20% in Fontan operation group (n=5) with subsequent clinical findings of acute hepatic dysfunction. Significant correlations were found between Shvo2 values early after surgery and subsequent peak values in serum hepatic enzymes. Serum total bilirubin and prothrombin time started to deteriorate when Shvo2 became below 30%. Cardiac index, hepatic perfusion pressure and mixed venous oxygen saturation showed positive linear correlations with Shvo2, and central venous pressure (CVP) with an inverse relation. In chronic valvular disease 8n-28), those with NYHA class IV patients showed lower Shvo2 (average; 47.4%) at cardiac catheterization than the others (class-I; 66.4%, class-II; 63.9%, p<0.05). These results indicate that Shvo2 monitoring appears to be useful to assess the hepatic perfusion in terms of oxygen supply-demand relation in acute and chronic heart failure, and Shvo2 of 30% seems to be a critical level.
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© Japanese Circulation Society
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