Maintaining organ perfusion is the key to successful intensive care medicine. Shock is the most dangerous microcirculatory disorder and one of the most hazardous and lethal conditions of critically ill patients still showing high mortality rates. However, there are still ongoing controversies, how to assess microcirculation, how to predict outcome in time and how to guide specific therapy. Macrocirculation does not reflect microcirculation. Microcirculation reflects organ perfusion and correlates with the outcome. There is growing evidence that microcirculatory parameters are powerful tools to predict the outcome after cardiac arrest. Several guidelines use it as a target to guide therapy, but these recommendations base only on supporting evidence of low quality. Lactate is a late reflector of reduced organ perfusion and is of limited value for time-critical decision-making and their value as a therapeutic target. Sublingual sidestream dark-field (SDF) - measurement is a non-invasive method that reliably reflects organ perfusion. The last generation of microcirculation assessment tools are easy to use hand-held devices that use an automatic algorithm. In consequence, microcirculation has become a directly detectable physiological compartment. However, systematic investigations about this technology in shock are still lacking. DAMIS determines the value of directly assessed microcirculation on outcome in different types of shock. Therefore, this multicenter study will recruit up to 200 patients in shock. After the first measurement, patients will be randomized either to intervention or to control. The intervention consists in knowing microcirculatory parameters. A checklist will assist the treating physicians of the interventional group in explaining microcirculatory values and offering possible treatment options. Patients in the control group will be measured as well, but results will not be communicated to the treating physician.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
141
Sublingual SDF-Measurement at admission and after 24h, with communication and interpreting checklist to the treating physician
Sublingual SDF-Measurement at admission and after 24h, without communication and interpreting checklist to the treating physician
Division of Cardiology, Pulmonary Disease and Vascular Medicine
Düsseldorf, Germany
Department of Anaesthesiology and Critical Care, Medical Centre - University of Freiburg, Faculty of Medicine
Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany
Department of Anesthesiology, Center of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf
Hamburg, Germany
Department of Cardiology, Heart Center Leipzig at University of Leipzig
Leipzig, Germany
Robert-Bosch-Krankenhaus, Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine
Stuttgart, Germany
mortality
relationship of bedside measurement of microcirculation with the clinical outcome in terms of mortality
Time frame: 30 day
mortality
relationship of bedside measurement of microcirculation with the clinical outcome in terms of mortality
Time frame: 6 and 12 months
length of stay at ICU and hospital
relationship of bedside measurement of microcirculation with the clinical outcome in terms of length of stay
Time frame: 90 days
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