Southern African Journal of Critical Care (Jul 2016)

An observational study on the relationship between plasma vitamin C blood glucose oxidative stress endothelial dysfunction and outcome in patients with septic shock

  • Kondwani Katundu,
  • Lauren Hill,
  • Lester Davids,
  • Ivan Joubert,
  • Malcolm Miller,
  • Jenna Piercy,
  • William Michelle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7196/SAJCC.2016.v32i1.270
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 1
pp. 21 – 21

Abstract

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Background. Septic shock is associated with endothelial dysfunction and oxidative stress, against which vitamin C plays a protective role, possiblyinfluencing clinical outcome. Hyperglycaemia may lower vitamin C.Objective. To study plasma vitamin C, oxidative stress, hyperglycaemia, endothelial dysfunction and outcome in septic shock.Methods. In a prospective, observational study of 25 adult septic shock patients, serial blood samples were analysed for vitamin C, thiobarbituricacid-reactive substances (TBARS) (a biomarker of oxidative stress), and soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (sVCAM-1) and E-selectin(markers of endothelial dysfunction). Blood glucose, Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) scores and fluid requirements were monitored.Results. Plasma vitamin C was low, while plasma TBARS were high throughout the 7-day study period. Endothelial dysfunction markers (sVCAM-1and E-selectin) were high at the baseline. VCAM-1 decreased significantly on day 1 and normalised on day 7. E-selectin was unchanged on day 1compared with baseline, but increased significantly on day 7. Oxidative stress and endothelial dysfunction were associated with increased SOFAscore. Increased oxidative stress was associated with increased requirements for intravenous fluids and prolonged duration of vasoconstrictorsupport. Nine patients died in hospital. At baseline, levels of TBARS were significantly higher in non-survivors than in the survivors of septic shock.Conclusion. In septic shock, clinically relevant oxidative stress was associated with endothelial dysfunction, low vitamin C and high glucoseto-vitamin-C ratios. Markers of oxidative stress and endothelial damage were increased and correlated with resuscitation fluid requirements,vasoconstrictor use, organ failure and mortality.