Harmful Effects of Hyperoxia in Postcardiac Arrest, Sepsis, Traumatic Brain Injury, or Stroke: The Importance of Individualized Oxygen Therapy in Critically Ill Patients.
Jean-Louis VincentFabio Silvio TacconeXinrong HePublished in: Canadian respiratory journal (2017)
The beneficial effects of oxygen are widely known, but the potentially harmful effects of high oxygenation concentrations in blood and tissues have been less widely discussed. Providing supplementary oxygen can increase oxygen delivery in hypoxaemic patients, thus supporting cell function and metabolism and limiting organ dysfunction, but, in patients who are not hypoxaemic, supplemental oxygen will increase oxygen concentrations into nonphysiological hyperoxaemic ranges and may be associated with harmful effects. Here, we discuss the potentially harmful effects of hyperoxaemia in various groups of critically ill patients, including postcardiac arrest, traumatic brain injury or stroke, and sepsis. In all these groups, there is evidence that hyperoxia can be harmful and that oxygen prescription should be individualized according to repeated assessment of ongoing oxygen requirements.
Keyphrases
- traumatic brain injury
- acute kidney injury
- intensive care unit
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- oxidative stress
- stem cells
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- septic shock
- cell proliferation
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier
- respiratory failure
- mechanical ventilation
- cerebral ischemia
- severe traumatic brain injury