Background and objective: During sepsis and endotoxaemia, hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) is impaired. Sedation of septic patients in ICUs is performed with various anaesthetics, most of which have pulmonary dilatory properties. Ketamine is a sympathetic nervous system-activating anaesthetic that preserves cardiovascular stability. The effects of ketamine on the pulmonary vasculature and HPV during sepsis have not been characterized yet.
Methods: Therefore, isolated lungs of mice were perfused with ketamine (0, 0.1, 1.0, and 10 mg kg(-1) body weight min) 18 h following intraperitoneal injection of lipopolysaccharide (LPS); untreated mouse groups served as controls (n = 7 per group, respectively). Pulmonary artery pressure (PAP) and pressure-flow curves during normoxic (FiO(2) = 0.21) and hypoxic (FiO(2) = 0.01) ventilation were obtained.
Results: HPV was reduced in endotoxaemic animals when compared with controls (means +/- SD; DeltaPAP control 103 +/- 28% vs. LPS 23 +/- 25%, P < 0.05). Ketamine caused a dose-dependent reduction of HPV in the lungs of control (DeltaPAP 0 mg kg(-1) min(-1) ketamine 103 +/- 28% vs. 10 mg kg(-1) min(-1) ketamine 28 +/- 21%, P < 0.05) and septic animals (DeltaPAP 0 mg kg(-1) min(-1) ketamine 23 +/- 25% vs. 10 mg kg(-1) min(-1) ketamine 0 +/- 4%, P < 0.05). Analysis of pressure-flow curves revealed that ketamine partly reversed the endotoxin-induced changes in basal pulmonary vascular wall properties rather than interfering with the HPV response itself.
Conclusion: Ketamine modified baseline pulmonary vascular properties, resulting in a reduced HPV responsiveness in untreated mice. Further, ketamine counteracted the LPS-induced changes in pulmonary vascular pressure-flow relationships, but did not affect impaired HPV in this murine endotoxaemia model.