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Dive into the research topics where Cecilia Luengo is active.

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Featured researches published by Cecilia Luengo.


Critical Care | 2009

Is thenar tissue hemoglobin oxygen saturation in septic shock related to macrohemodynamic variables and outcome

Didier Payen; Cecilia Luengo; Laurent Heyer; Matthieu Resche-Rigon; Sébastien Kerever; Charles Damoisel; Marie Reine Losser

IntroductionThe study objectives were to evaluate septic shock-induced alterations in skeletal muscle hemoglobin oxygenation saturation (StO2) using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and forearm skin blood flow velocity using laser Doppler (LD) to determine the relationship of macroperfusion and microperfusion parameters, and to test the relationship of the worst NIRS parameters during the first 24 hours of shock with 28-day prognosis.MethodsA prospective, observational study was performed in a 21-bed university hospital surgical intensive care unit. Forty-three septic shock patients with at least another organ failure underwent a 3-minute, upper arm (brachial artery) vascular occlusion test (VOT). Microperfusion parameters (thenar eminence StO2 and forearm LD skin blood flow) were collected on days 1, 2 and 3, before (baseline StO2 and LD values) and during the 3-minute VOT with calculation of occlusion and reperfusion slopes for StO2 and LD. Daily Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (SOFA) score, macrohemodynamic parameters (systolic arterial blood pressure, cardiac output (pulmonary artery catheter or transesophageal Doppler), mixed venous oxygen saturation (pulmonary artery or superior vena cava catheter)) and metabolic parameters (pH, base excess, lactate) were determined.ResultsBaseline StO2 (82% (75 to 88) vs. 89% (85 to 92), P = 0.04) and reperfusion slope (2.79%/second (1.75 to 4.32) vs. 9.35%/second (8.32 to 11.57), P < 0.0001) were lower in septic shock patients than in healthy volunteers. StO2 reperfusion slope correlated with occlusion slope (P < 0.0001), cardiac output (P = 0.01) and LD reperfusion slope (P = 0.08), and negatively with lactate level (P = 0.04). The worst StO2 reperfusion slope during the first day of shock was lower in nonsurvivors than in survivors (P = 0.003) and improved significantly the predictive value of Simplified Acute Physiology Score II and SOFA scores.ConclusionsThe alteration of StO2 reperfusion slope in septic shock patients compared with healthy volunteers was related with macrohemodynamic, microhemodynamic and metabolic parameters. The addition of the worst value of the day 1 StO2 reperfusion slope improved the outcome prediction of Simplified Acute Physiology Score II and SOFA scores.


International Journal of Antimicrobial Agents | 2011

Higher than recommended amikacin loading doses achieve pharmacokinetic targets without associated toxicity

Ricardo Gálvez; Cecilia Luengo; Rodrigo Cornejo; Johann Kosche; Carlos Romero; Eduardo Tobar; Victor Illanes; Osvaldo Llanos; José S. Castro

Antibiotic therapy improves the outcome of severe sepsis and septic shock, however pharmacokinetic properties are altered in this scenario. Amikacin (AMK) is an option to treat community or nosocomial infections, although standard doses might be insufficient in critically ill patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate two AMK dosage regimens in comparison with standard therapy with regard to efficacy in achieving adequate plasma levels as well as safety. In total, 99 patients with severe sepsis or septic shock were randomised to different AMK dose protocols: Group 1, 25 mg/kg/day; Group 2, 30 mg/kg/day; and Group 3, historical standard dose (15 mg/kg/day). Peak plasma concentrations at 1 h (C(max)) were determined. Pharmacokinetics was determined and renal function was monitored to evaluate toxicity. Groups were compared using bilateral T-test. Demographic characteristics of the three groups were comparable. AMK C(max) values were 57.4±9.8, 72.1±18.4 and 35.2±9.4 μg/mL, respectively (P<0.001 between Groups 1 and 2 versus Group 3, and P<0.01 between Group 1 versus Group 2). A C(max)>60 μg/mL was reached by 39%, 76% and 0% of patients in Groups 1, 2 and 3, respectively (P<0.001) and creatinine clearance at Day 28 was 95.6±47.4, 89.7±26.6 and 56.4±18.4 mL/min, respectively. In conclusion, a 30 mg/kg daily dose of AMK presents significantly higher C(max) compared with the other groups, with 76% of patients reaching recommended peak plasma levels with no association with higher nephrotoxicity. Standard doses are insufficient in critically ill patients to reach the recommended C(max).


Annals of Intensive Care | 2014

When to stop septic shock resuscitation: clues from a dynamic perfusion monitoring

Glenn Hernandez; Cecilia Luengo; Alejandro Bruhn; Eduardo Kattan; Gilberto Friedman; Gustavo Adolfo Ospina-Tascón; Andrea Fuentealba; Ricardo Castro; Tomás Regueira; Carlos Romero; Can Ince; Jan Bakker

BackgroundThe decision of when to stop septic shock resuscitation is a critical but yet a relatively unexplored aspect of care. This is especially relevant since the risks of over-resuscitation with fluid overload or inotropes have been highlighted in recent years. A recent guideline has proposed normalization of central venous oxygen saturation and/or lactate as therapeutic end-points, assuming that these variables are equivalent or interchangeable. However, since the physiological determinants of both are totally different, it is legitimate to challenge the rationale of this proposal. We designed this study to gain more insights into the most appropriate resuscitation goal from a dynamic point of view. Our objective was to compare the normalization rates of these and other potential perfusion-related targets in a cohort of septic shock survivors.MethodsWe designed a prospective, observational clinical study. One hundred and four septic shock patients with hyperlactatemia were included and followed until hospital discharge. The 84 hospital-survivors were kept for final analysis. A multimodal perfusion assessment was performed at baseline, 2, 6, and 24 h of ICU treatment.ResultsSome variables such as central venous oxygen saturation, central venous-arterial pCO2 gradient, and capillary refill time were already normal in more than 70% of survivors at 6 h. Lactate presented a much slower normalization rate decreasing significantly at 6 h compared to that of baseline (4.0 [3.0 to 4.9] vs. 2.7 [2.2 to 3.9] mmol/L; p < 0.01) but with only 52% of patients achieving normality at 24 h. Sublingual microcirculatory variables exhibited the slowest recovery rate with persistent derangements still present in almost 80% of patients at 24 h.ConclusionsPerfusion-related variables exhibit very different normalization rates in septic shock survivors, most of them exhibiting a biphasic response with an initial rapid improvement, followed by a much slower trend thereafter. This fact should be taken into account to determine the most appropriate criteria to stop resuscitation opportunely and avoid the risk of over-resuscitation.


Case Reports | 2010

Organizing pneumonia in patients with severe respiratory failure due to novel A (H1N1) influenza.

Rodrigo Cornejo; Osvaldo Llanos; Cristina Fernández; Juan Carlos Díaz; Gonzalo Cardemil; Jorge Salguero; Cecilia Luengo; Eduardo Tobar; Carlos Romero; Luis Ricardo Gálvez

The authors describe two cases that developed organizing pneumonia (OP) associated with novel influenza A(H1N1) virus. These patients were admitted to intensive care unit (ICU) because of severe respiratory failure. After initial clinical improvement, both patients worsened their condition during their second week of ICU stay, presenting fever, increasing in inflammatory parameters and worsening in oxygen exchange and respiratory mechanics. Chest x-rays and computed tomographies showed an increment on lung infiltrates, given by areas of consolidation and ground glass opacification. Although broad-spectrum antibiotics were administered, patients showed no improvement. All cultures, including bronchoalveolar lavage samples, were negative. In both cases, an open lung biopsy was performed, and histopathological examination of the specimen was compatible with OP. Both patients were successfully treated with high-dose corticoids. The aim of this report is to alert about the possibility of OP associated with novel influenza virus in patients with severe respiratory failure.


Annals of Intensive Care | 2013

Near-infrared spectroscopy StO2 monitoring to assess the therapeutic effect of drotrecogin alfa (activated) on microcirculation in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock

Jordi Masip; J. Mesquida; Cecilia Luengo; Gisela Gili; Gemma Gomà; Ricard Ferrer; Jean-Louis Teboul; Didier Payen; Antonio Artigas

BackgroundSepsis is a leading cause of death despite appropriate management. There is increasing evidence that microcirculatory alterations might persist independently from macrohemodynamic improvement and are related to clinical evolution. Future efforts need to be directed towards microperfusion monitoring and treatment. This study explored the utility of thenar muscle oxygen saturation (StO2) and its changes during a transient vascular occlusion test (VOT) to measure the microcirculatory response to drotrecogin alfa (activated) (DrotAA) in septic patients.MethodsA prospective, observational study was performed in three general intensive care units at three university hospitals. We studied 58 patients with recent onset of severe sepsis or septic shock and at least two organ dysfunctions. Thirty-two patients were treated with DrotAA and 26 were not treated because of formal contraindication. StO2 was monitored using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), and VOT was performed to obtain deoxygenation (DeOx) and reoxygenation (ReOx) slopes. Measurements were obtained before DrotAA was started and were repeated daily for a 96-hour period.ResultsPatients’ characteristics, outcome, severity, and baseline values of StO2, DeOx, and ReOx did not differ between groups. Treated patients significantly improved DeOx and ReOx values over time, whereas control patients did not. In treated patients, ReOx improvements were correlated to norepinephrine dose reductions. Early clinical response (SOFA improvement after 48 hours of treatment) was not associated to changes in VOT-derived slopes. In the treated group, the relative improvement of DeOx within 48 hours was able to predict mortality (AUC 0.91, p < 0.01).ConclusionsIn patients with severe sepsis or septic shock, DrotAA infusion was associated with improvement in regional tissue oxygenation. The degree of DeOx amelioration after 2 days in treated patients predicted mortality with high sensitivity and specificity. Thus, StO2 derived variables might be useful to evaluate the microcirculatory response to treatment of septic shock.


Intensive Care Medicine Experimental | 2014

0101. Early and severe impairment of lactate clearance in endotoxic shock is not related to liver hypoperfusion: preliminary report

Pablo Tapia; Dagoberto Soto; Alejandro Bruhn; Tomás Regueira; Nicolás Jarufe; Leyla Alegría; Jp Bachler; F Leon; C Vicuña; Cecilia Luengo; Gustavo Adolfo Ospina-Tascón; Jan Bakker; Glenn Hernandez

Although the prognostic value of persistent hyperlactatemia in septic shock is unequivocal, its physiological determinants are controversial. In particular, the role of impaired hepatic clearance has been considered as relevant only in severe shock with liver ischemia or advanced cirrhosis. However, very few studies have addressed this subject.


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2014

Central venous saturation in septic shock: co-oximetry vs gasometry

Carlos Romero; Cecilia Luengo; Eduardo Tobar; Luis Fábrega; María Jesús Vial; Rodrigo Cornejo; Ricardo Gálvez; Osvaldo Llanos

OBJECTIVES Central venous oxygen saturation calculated by gasometry (Gaso-Scvo2) is more available than central venous oxygen saturation measured by co-oximetry (Co-oxy-Scvo2) in environments with less resources and underdeveloped countries. Therefore, we aimed to determine the agreement between Co-oxy-Scvo2 and Gaso-Scvo2 and between central venous oxygen tension measured by gasometry (Gaso-Pcvo2) and Co-oxy-Scvo2, respectively. DESIGN AND SETTINGS This is a prospective study in a university hospitals intensive care unit. PATIENTS Sixteen patients were studied during the first 48 hours after diagnosis of septic shock. All patients were intubated, connected to mechanical ventilation, and resuscitated according to the standards of care. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS One hundred eleven pairs of central venous blood measurements were analyzed both by conventional gasometry and co-oximetry. Bland and Altman analysis between Co-oxy-Scvo2 and Gaso-Scvo2 showed lack of agreement (1.7 [-10.7, +14.2]). A Gaso-Scvo2 less than 70% had a positive predictive value of 63% in relation to Co-oxy-Scvo2, and its negative predictive value was 90% with 20% false-positives and 5% false-negatives. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of Gaso-Pcvo2 to discriminate a Co-oxy-Scvo2 greater than or equal to 70% was 0.87 (confidence interval, 0.80-0.93), and the best cut-off point was a Gaso-Pcvo2 more than 40 mm Hg, (sensitivity, 75%; specificity, 93%). CONCLUSIONS The reliability of Gaso-Scvo2 determination during the resuscitation phase of septic shock is not acceptable. There is a good agreement between a Gaso-Pcvo2 more than 40 mm Hg and a Co-oxy-Scvo2 greater than or equal to 70%. Our results suggest that given these limitations, Gaso-Scvo2 results should be interpreted with caution, helped by Gaso-Pcvo2 measurements and in context with other perfusion parameters.


Revista Brasileira De Terapia Intensiva | 2015

Fiber optic bronchoscopy-assisted percutaneous tracheostomy: a decade of experience at a university hospital

Carlos Romero; Rodrigo Cornejo; Eduardo Tobar; Ricardo Gálvez; Cecilia Luengo; Nivia Estuardo; Rodolfo Neira; José Navarro; Osvaldo Abarca; Mauricio Ruiz; María Angélica Berasaín; Wilson R. Neira; Daniel H. Arellano; Osvaldo Llanos

Objective To evaluate the efficacy and safety of percutaneous tracheostomy by means of single-step dilation with fiber optic bronchoscopy assistance in critical care patients under mechanical ventilation. Methods Between the years 2004 and 2014, 512 patients with indication of tracheostomy according to clinical criteria, were prospectively and consecutively included in our study. One-third of them were high-risk patients. Demographic variables, APACHE II score, and days on mechanical ventilation prior to percutaneous tracheostomy were recorded. The efficacy of the procedure was evaluated according to an execution success rate and based on the necessity of switching to an open surgical technique. Safety was evaluated according to post-operative and operative complication rates. Results The mean age of the group was 64 ± 18 years (203 women and 309 males). The mean APACHE II score was 21 ± 3. Patients remained an average of 11 ± 3 days on mechanical ventilation before percutaneous tracheostomy was performed. All procedures were successfully completed without the need to switch to an open surgical technique. Eighteen patients (3.5%) presented procedure complications. Five patients experienced transient desaturation, 4 presented low blood pressure related to sedation, and 9 presented minor bleeding, but none required a transfusion. No serious complications or deaths associated with the procedure were recorded. Eleven patients (2.1%) presented post-operative complications. Seven presented minor and transitory bleeding of the percutaneous tracheostomy stoma, 2 suffered displacement of the tracheostomy cannula, and 2 developed a superficial infection of the stoma. Conclusion Percutaneous tracheostomy using the single-step dilation technique with fiber optic bronchoscopy assistance seems to be effective and safe in critically ill patients under mechanical ventilation when performed by experienced intensive care specialists using a standardized procedure.


Intensive Care Medicine Experimental | 2015

Dexmedetomidine ameliorates gut lactate production and impairment of exogenous lactate clearance in an endotoxic sheep model

Glenn Hernandez; Pablo Tapia; Gustavo Adolfo Ospina-Tascón; Alejandro Bruhn; Dagoberto Soto; Leyla Alegría; Nicolás Jarufe; Cecilia Luengo; Rodrigo Menchaca; Arturo Meissner; María Ignacia Vives; Jan Bakker

The mechanisms of persistent hyperlactemia during endotoxic shock are probably multifactorial. Both hypoperfusion-related anaerobic production and adrenergic-driven aerobic generation have been implicated. More recently an early and severe impairment in exogenous lactate clearance has also been described [1]. Theoretically, an excessive adrenergic response could influence all these mechanisms and thus aggravate the problem.


Intensive Care Medicine | 2013

Effects of dobutamine on systemic, regional and microcirculatory perfusion parameters in septic shock: a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover study.

Glenn Hernandez; Alejandro Bruhn; Cecilia Luengo; Tomás Regueira; Eduardo Kattan; Andrea Fuentealba; Jorge Florez; Ricardo Castro; Andres Aquevedo; Ronald Pairumani; Paul McNab; Can Ince

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Carlos Romero

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Glenn Hernandez

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Alejandro Bruhn

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Eduardo Kattan

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Dagoberto Soto

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Jan Bakker

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Leyla Alegría

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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Nicolás Jarufe

Pontifical Catholic University of Chile

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