乳酸在心源性休克中的作用:病理生理学、预后价值和临床解释。

IF 5.5 1区 医学 Q1 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Annals of Intensive Care Pub Date : 2026-04-20 eCollection Date: 2026-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.aicoj.2026.100061
Bruno Levy, Glenn Hernandez, Hamid Merdji
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在心源性休克(CS)中,血乳酸浓度通常用于评估休克严重程度并指导临床决策。然而,乳酸浓度的解释往往被过度简化,导致疾病严重程度、休克可逆性和治疗失败之间的混淆。因此,需要对整个CS过程中乳酸行为有临床基础的了解。在CS中,乳酸升高主要反映心输出量减少引起的全身灌注不足的程度和持续时间,通常伴有局部缺血,特别是在内脏区域。除了厌氧机制外,乳酸的产生还受到肾上腺素能刺激、心脏骤停后综合征、缺血再灌注损伤、全身炎症和线粒体功能障碍的影响。肝脏和肾脏清除受损进一步导致持续高乳酸血症,这解释了为什么尽管大循环变量明显恢复,乳酸水平仍可能升高。在临床上,入院乳酸是一个强有力的初始休克严重程度的标志,并始终与早期死亡率相关。然而,一旦复苏开始,单独的乳酸值提供有限的信息。随着时间的推移,连续测量和乳酸轨迹更准确地反映代谢恢复和对治疗的反应。早期乳酸清除率确定患者具有可逆性休克生理,而持续或升高的乳酸水平表明难治性休克、持续的微循环功能障碍或清除受损。在需要机械循环支持的CS患者中,特别是静脉-动脉体外膜氧合(VA-ECMO),乳酸盐在临床评估中起着核心作用。着床前乳酸反映疾病的严重程度,但不应被解释为无效的独立标准。在VA-ECMO启动后,早期乳酸清除率是生存的最强预测因素之一,而尽管有足够的装置流量,持续性高乳酸血症与多器官衰竭和不良预后相关。在CS中,乳酸应该被解释为反映低灌注、代谢应激和清除之间平衡的综合动态生物标志物,而不仅仅是组织缺氧。基于轨迹的乳酸评估与临床背景和循环支持策略密切相关,为风险分层、治疗指导和休克可逆性评估提供了关键信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Lactate in cardiogenic shock: pathophysiology, prognostic value, and clinical interpretation.

In cardiogenic shock (CS), blood lactate concentration is routinely used to assess shock severity and guide clinical decisions. However, lactate interpretation is often oversimplified, leading to confusion between disease severity, shock reversibility, and treatment failure. A clinically grounded understanding of lactate behavior throughout the course of CS is therefore required. In CS, lactate elevation primarily reflects the magnitude and duration of systemic hypoperfusion caused by reduced cardiac output, often compounded by regional ischemia, particularly in the splanchnic territory. In addition to anaerobic mechanisms, lactate production is influenced by adrenergic stimulation, post-cardiac arrest syndrome, ischemia-reperfusion injury, systemic inflammation, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Impaired hepatic and renal clearance further contributes to sustained hyperlactatemia, explaining why lactate may remain elevated despite apparent restoration of macrocirculatory variables. Clinically, admission lactate is a robust marker of initial shock severity and is consistently associated with early mortality. However, once resuscitation has started, isolated lactate values provide limited information. Serial measurements and lactate trajectories over time more accurately reflect metabolic recovery and response to therapy. Early lactate clearance identifies patients with reversible shock physiology, whereas persistent or rising lactate levels indicate refractory shock, ongoing microcirculatory dysfunction, or impaired clearance. In CS patients requiring mechanical circulatory support, particularly veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO), lactate plays a central role in clinical assessment. Pre-implantation lactate reflects disease severity but should not be interpreted as a stand-alone criterion for futility. Following VA-ECMO initiation, early lactate clearance is one of the strongest predictors of survival, while persistent hyperlactatemia despite adequate device flow is associated with multiorgan failure and poor outcome. In CS, lactate should be interpreted as an integrative and dynamic biomarker reflecting the balance between hypoperfusion, metabolic stress, and clearance rather than tissue hypoxia alone. Trajectory-based lactate assessment, closely aligned with clinical context and circulatory support strategies, provides critical information for risk stratification, therapeutic guidance, and evaluation of shock reversibility.

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来源期刊
Annals of Intensive Care
Annals of Intensive Care CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE-
CiteScore
14.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
107
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Intensive Care is an online peer-reviewed journal that publishes high-quality review articles and original research papers in the field of intensive care medicine. It targets critical care providers including attending physicians, fellows, residents, nurses, and physiotherapists, who aim to enhance their knowledge and provide optimal care for their patients. The journal's articles are included in various prestigious databases such as CAS, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, OCLC, PubMed, PubMed Central, Science Citation Index Expanded, SCOPUS, and Summon by Serial Solutions.
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