Artery to Vein Differences in Nitric Oxide Metabolites Are Diminished in Sepsis (original) (raw)

. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2012 Apr 10.

Abstract

Objective

Nitric oxide (NO) deficiency may contribute to microvascular dysfunction in sepsis. Current physiologic paradigms contend that nitrite and/ or S-nitrosohemoglobin (SNOHb) mediate intravascular delivery of NO. These NO metabolites are purportedly consumed during hemoglobin deoxygenation producing NO and coupling intravascular NO delivery with metabolic demand. Systemic nitrite and SNOHb consumption can be assessed by comparing their concentrations in arterial vs. venous blood. We hypothesized that arterial vs. venous (A-V) differences in nitrite and SNOHb are diminished in sepsis and associated with mortality.

Design

Case-control and prospective cohort study

Setting

Adult intensive care units of an academic medical center

Patients and subjects

87 critically ill septic patients and 52 control subjects

Interventions

None

Measurements and Main Results

Nitrite and SNOHb were measured using tri-iodide-based reductive chemiluminescence. In control subjects, arterial plasma, whole blood and red blood cell nitrite levels were higher than the corresponding venous levels. In contrast, SNOHb was higher in venous compared to arterial blood. In septic patients, A-V RBC nitrite and SNOHb differences were absent. Moreover, the plasma nitrite A-V difference was absent in non-survivors.

Conclusions

In health, nitrite levels are higher in arterial vs. venous blood (suggesting systemic nitrite consumption) whereas SNOHb levels are higher in venous vs. arterial blood (suggesting systemic SNOHb production). These A-V differences are diminished in sepsis, and diminished A-V plasma nitrite differences are associated with mortality. These data suggest pathologic disruption of systemic nitrite utilization in sepsis.

Keywords: septic shock, nitric oxide, nitrites, critical care, intensive care, erythrocytes

INTRODUCTION

The purported roles of nitric oxide (NO) in sepsis are contradictory: excessive production causing hypotension (1), and reduced production impairing microvascular blood flow (2). Excessive NO production in human sepsis is suggested by elevated concentrations of plasma nitrate plus nitrite (NOx) (3-6). However, recent metabolic isotope studies indicate reduced NO production in septic patients (7, 8). Moreover, inhibiting NO production increases the risk of mortality in septic patients (9).

Nitric oxide appears to have endocrine activity, with physiologic effects occurring distant from the NO source (10). This presumably occurs by formation of circulating NO metabolites that are consumed as hemoglobin deoxygenates, releasing NO bioactivity and matching blood flow with metabolic need. S-nitrosohemoglobin (SNOHb) (11) and nitrite (12) are postulated mediators of this effect. In vivo, this paradigm is supported by studies showing higher arterial vs. venous concentrations of nitrite and SNOHb (10-14), suggesting consumption of the metabolite (and coincident NO release) in the systemic vasculature. This is analogous to measuring the A-V oxygen content difference, with larger differences suggesting higher systemic oxygen consumption. Although there is general agreement that such intravascular NO delivery occurs, controversy surrounds the identity of responsible metabolite(s) (15).

Reports of nitrite and SNOHb concentrations in septic humans are limited (16-18). There are no reports of paired arterial and venous measurements in sepsis. We hypothesized that systemic consumption of these NO metabolites is impaired in sepsis and associated with mortality. To test this hypothesis, we measured arterial and venous levels of NO metabolites in patients with severe sepsis or septic shock and a control group without acute illness. We reasoned that arteriovenous (A-V) NO metabolite differences should be present in healthy subjects, but not in sepsis patients, despite similar age and gender distributions. We further reasoned that A-V differences should be disrupted to a greater extent in sepsis non-survivors compared to survivors.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study design

Consecutive patients meeting diagnostic criteria for severe sepsis or septic shock in the medical or surgical intensive care unit (ICU) of the University of Rochester Medical Center (19) were eligible. Control subjects without acute illness were recruited by age and gender strata approximating the sepsis cohort. Exclusion criteria are listed in Table 1. The primary outcome measures were presence of sepsis and hospital mortality. Written informed consent was obtained from subjects or surrogate decision-makers. This study was approved by the University of Rochester Research Subjects Review Board.

Table 1.

Exclusion criteria

Code status limitations precluding critical care management (e.g. directives against use of mechanicalventilation or vasopressor agents).
Refusal of patient or designated surrogate decision-maker to provide written informed consent, or inabilityto obtain consent within 48 hours of diagnosis
Severe cardiomyopathy with left-ventricular ejection fraction < 30%a
Chronic dialysis-dependent renal failurea
History of solid organ or bone marrow/ stem cell transplantationa
Pre-existing advanced liver disease (Child-Pugh Grade C)a
Organic nitrate therapya
Current active bleedinga
Hematocrit < 22% or <25% while on vasopressorsa
Pregnancy or hormone replacement therapy (HRT)a
>48 hours since severe sepsis/ septic shock diagnosis
Arterial catheter for blood sampling not available
Laboratory equipment or staff not available

Measurement of NO Metabolites

Arterial and venous blood samples were obtained within 48 hours of severe sepsis/ septic shock diagnosis, or during an outpatient visit to the Clinical Research Center in control subjects. Nitric oxide metabolites were measured using tri-iodide (I3−) - based reductive chemiluminescence (20-22) (see description of methods in Supplemental Digital Content 1). The assays yielded measurements of plasma, red blood cell (RBC) and whole blood (WB) nitrite, plasma nitrate, SNOHb, RBC XNO (RBC XNO signifies primarily iron-nitrosyl hemoglobin [FeNOHb], but may also include RBC nitrosamines (23, 24)), and the combination of plasma nitrosothiols, metal nitrosyl compounds and nitrosamines.

Statistical Analysis

Nitric oxide metabolite distributions were right-skewed. Normal distributions were approximated by square root transformations of plasma nitrate and log (base 10) transformations of the other NO metabolites. The data were transformed accordingly prior to statistical analysis. Paired t-tests were used to compare arterial and venous NO metabolite concentrations. Unpaired t-tests with unequal variance were used to compare metabolites between cases and controls, and between survivors and non-survivors. Chi-square testing was used for comparison of categorical variables. Two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to assess differences in NO metabolite concentrations between groups while controlling for potential confounding variables (see statistical methods in Supplemental Digital Content 1). Results are summarized as means with 95% confidence interval (C.I.) after back-transformation to the original scale unless otherwise specified. A p value of ≤ 0.05 was accepted as statistically significant. Statistical analyses were performed using Stata/ SE version 9.2 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX).

RESULTS

Research Subjects

From February 2006 – July 2008, 597 ICU patients were screened and 87 met enrollment criteria (Figure 1). Samples were collected 27 ± 12 (mean ± standard deviation [S.D.]) hours after diagnosis of severe sepsis or septic shock. Fifty-two non-septic control subjects were recruited. Subject characteristics are shown in Table 2. Technical problems precluded measurement of WB nitrite in 3 sepsis patients and SNOHb in 4 subjects (1 control subject, 3 sepsis patients).

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Enrollment flow-diagram for sepsis patients

Table 2.

Baseline characteristics of study subjects a

Controls(n=52) Sepsis(n=87) pb Survivors(n=59) Non-survivors(n=28) pc
Aged 59 ± 12 59 ± 18 0.86 55 ± 17 69 ± 16 0.0005
Male sex 26 (50%) 48 (55%) 0.55 32 (54%) 16 (57%) 0.80
Non-Caucasian race 3 (6%) 17 (19%) 0.04 10 (17%) 6 (21%) 0.61
Pre-existing Conditions
Hypertension 11 (21%) 53 (61%) <0.001 29 (49%) 24 (86%) 0.001
Diabetes mellitus 7 (13%) 22 (25%) 0.10 14 (24%) 8 (28%) 0.62
Smoking 1 (2%) 30 (34%) <0.001 22 (37%) 8 (28%) 0.42
Hypercholesterolemia 16 (31%) 26 (30%) 0.91 18 (30%) 8 (28%) 0.85
CAD 3 (6%) 13 (15%) 0.10 9 (15%) 4 (14%) 0.90
Liver disease 2 (4%) 5 (6%) 0.62 2 (3%) 3 (10%) 0.17
Creatinine (mg/dL) e 0.7 (0.6-0.8) 1.3 (0.9 – 2.1) <0.001 1.1 (0.8 – 1.6) 1.7 (1.3 – 2.5) 0.004
Admission category
Medical (vs. surgical) -- 79 (92%) -- 55/59 (93%) 25/28 (89%) 0.50
APACHE II Score d -- 26 (± 9) -- 24 ± 8 31 ± 9 0.0001
Organ dysfunction (n) f 0.07
1 -- 10 (12%) -- 9 (15%) 1 (4%) --
2 -- 26 (30%) -- 21 (36%) 5 (18%) --
3 -- 20 (23%) -- 11 (19%) 9 (32%) --
≥ 4 -- 31 (36%) -- 18 (30%) 13 (46%) --
Site of Infection 0.75
Pulmonary -- 58 (67%) -- 41 (69%) 17 (61%) --
Intra-abdominal -- 12 (14%) -- 8 (14%) 4 (14%) --
Skin/ catheter -- 2 (2%) -- 1 (2%) 1 (4%) --
Urinary -- 11 (13%) -- 7 (12%) 4 (14%) --
Bloodstream -- 3 (3%) -- 1 (2%) 2 (7%) --
CNS -- 1 (1%) -- 1 (2%) -- --
Microbiology 0.20
Gram positive -- 29 (33%) -- 19 (32%) 10 (36%) --
Gram negative -- 15 (17%) -- 10 (17%) 5 (18%) --
Mixed -- 17 (20%) -- 8 (14%) 9 (32%) --
Fungal -- 3 (3%) -- 3 (5%) -- --
Other -- 4 (5%) -- 3 (5%) 1 (4%) --
Unknown -- 19 (22%) -- 16 (27%) 3 (11%) --
Positive blood cultures -- 31 (36%) -- 20 (34%) 11 (39%) 0.62
Septic shock g -- 80 (92%) -- 52 (88%) 28 (100%) 0.06
Vasopressor use -- 69 (79%) -- 41 (69%) 28 (100%) 0.001

Sepsis Patients vs. Control Subjects

In control subjects, arterial nitrite was significantly higher than venous nitrite in plasma, whole blood, and RBCs, suggesting nitrite consumption in the systemic circulation, whereas arterial SNOHb was lower than venous SNOHb, suggesting SNOHb production (Table 3 and Figure 2) (25). The A-V difference in RBC XNO was not statistically significant (Table 3).

Table 3.

NO Metabolites in control subjects and sepsis patients

NO Metabolitea Controls (n=52) Sepsis (n=87) p valueb
Arterial plasma nitrite 106 (83 - 134) 106 (85 - 132) 0.99
Venous plasma nitrite 67 (55 - 83) 66 (54 - 81) 0.90
p valuec <0.001 <0.001
Arterial WB nitrite 208 (185 - 235) 237 (212 - 265) 0.12
Venous WB nitrite 139 (122 - 161) 206 (184 - 232) <0.001
p valuec <0.001 <0.001
Arterial RBC nitrite 300 (246 - 365) 374 (282 - 496) 0.20
Venous RBC nitrite 165 (109 - 250) 355 (250 - 504) 0.006
p valuec 0.002 0.79
Arterial SNOHb 45 (32 - 64) 56 (42 - 76) 0.31
Venous SNOHb 123 (96 - 157) 80 (59 - 110) 0.03
p valuec <0.001 0.06
Arterial RBC XNO 22 (15 - 32) 19 (13 - 26) 0.49
Venous RBC XNO 28 (18 - 45) 33 (24 - 44) 0.71
p valuec 0.27 <0.001
Arterial nitrate 31 (24 - 38) 43 (34 - 53) 0.03
Venous nitrate 24 (19 - 30) 43 (34 - 52) <0.001
p valuec 0.08 1.0

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Arterial and venous nitrite and SNOHb concentrations in control subjects vs. sepsis patients. Panel A: plasma nitrite; Panel B: WB nitrite; Panel C: RBC nitrite; Panel D: SNOHb. Concentrations are plotted on the log10 scale. Dot plots show individual data points and corresponding summary plots show mean values with error bars representing standard deviation. Significance values above the bars refer to artery vs. vein comparisons. *p < 0.05 compared to corresponding venous concentration in control subjects.

Comparing sepsis patients to control subjects, there were no differences in arterial or venous plasma nitrite, and the A-V plasma nitrite difference was significant in both groups (Table 3 and Figure 2). In contrast, venous WB and RBC nitrite were significantly higher in septic patients than controls, but arterial WB and RBC nitrite levels were similar. This blunted the WB and RBC nitrite A-V (arterial > venous) nitrite differences in septic patients, suggesting impaired intra-erythrocytic nitrite utilization. Opposite results were observed for venous SNOHb. Compared to controls, sepsis patients had significantly lower venous SNOHb, but arterial levels were similar. This narrowed the A-V (venous > arterial) SNOHb difference in septic patients (Table 3 and Figure 2), suggesting impaired SNOHb production. There were no differences in arterial or venous RBC XNO between controls and sepsis patients. Arterial and venous nitrate were higher in sepsis patients compared to controls (Table 3). The sum concentration of plasma nitrosothiols, metal nitrosyls and nitrosamines was < 12 nM in arterial and venous blood of sepsis and control subjects (data not shown).

Two-way ANOVA showed that renal function confounded the apparent relationship between both arterial and venous nitrate and sepsis (creatinine-adjusted p values for associations between arterial or venous nitrate and sepsis > 0.60, analysis summarized in Table E3 of Supplemental Digital Content 1). In contrast, the association between venous WB nitrite and sepsis persisted after adjustment for possible confounding variables (adjusted p value for association between WB nitrite and sepsis = 0.014).

Multivariate ANOVA indicated that the association between venous SNOHb and sepsis was weakened after controlling for history of hypertension (adjusted p value = 0.194). To ensure that the diminished A-V SNOHb difference in sepsis patients was not confounded by differences in hypertension history between sepsis patients and control subjects, SNOHb A-V differences were examined in sepsis patients and controls stratified by hypertension history. Arterial SNOHb was less than venous SNOHb in controls without hypertension (n=40, arterial = 42 [27-66] vs. venous = 126 [94-168] nM, p < 0.001) and controls with hypertension (n=11, arterial = 56 [35-89] vs. venous = 112 [68-186] nM, p = 0.02). In contrast, arterial and venous plasma nitrite levels were not significantly different in sepsis patients without hypertension (n=32, arterial = 70 [45-110] vs. venous = 104 [71-152] nM, p = 0.09) and sepsis patients with hypertension (n=51, arterial = 49 [33-73] vs. venous = 68[43-107] nM, p = 0.21). This analysis confirms that significant A-V SNOHb differences exist in sepsis patients but not in control subjects, independent of hypertension history.

Hospital Survivors vs. Non-survivors

Twenty-eight patients (32%) with severe sepsis or septic shock died in the hospital (Table 2). The A-V plasma nitrite difference was significant in survivors but not in non-survivors (Figure 3), a consequence of higher venous plasma nitrite in non-survivors (Table 4), suggesting non-survivors have more generalized impairment of nitrite consumption in both plasma and RBC nitrite storage pools. The A-V difference in RBC XNO was significant in survivors but not non-survivors (Table 4).

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Arterial and venous nitrite and SNOHb concentrations in sepsis survivors vs. non-survivors. Panel A: plasma nitrite; Panel B: WB nitrite; Panel C: RBC nitrite; Panel D: SNOHb. Concentrations are plotted on the log10 scale. Dot plots show individual data points and corresponding summary plots show mean values with error bars representing standard deviation. Significance values above the bars refer to artery vs. vein comparisons. *p < 0.05 compared to corresponding venous concentration in survivors.

Table 4.

NO metabolites in sepsis survivors and non-survivors

NO Metabolitea Survivors (n=59b) Non-survivors (n=28b) p valuec
Arterial plasma nitrite 102 (82 - 127) 116 (69 - 194) 0.64
Venous plasma nitrite 57 (45 - 72) 91 (61 - 134) 0.04
p valued <0.0001 0.24
Arterial WB nitrite 225 (196 - 258) 265 (219 - 321) 0.17
Venous WB nitrite 197 (171 - 227) 227 (184 - 279) 0.26
p valued 0.0002 <0.0001
Arterial RBC nitrite 420 (321 - 549) 293 (146 - 588) 0.33
Venous RBC nitrite 412 (291 - 582) 260 (112 - 602) 0.31
p valued 0.92 0.80
Arterial SNOHb 54 (39 - 74) 65 (33 - 124) 0.60
Venous SNOHb 74 (52 - 105) 94 (49 - 181) 0.50
p valued 0.11 0.30
Arterial RBC XNO 16 (11 - 24) 24 (13 - 44) 0.30
Venous RBC XNO 29 (20 - 42) 38 (23 - 62) 0.38
p valued 0.0016 0.16
Arterial nitrate 42 (32 - 54) 45 (29 - 64) 0.79
Venous nitrate 39 (30 - 49) 53 (34 -75) 0.19
p valued 0.28 0.28

Age was a potential confounder of the relationship between higher venous plasma nitrite and hospital mortality (analysis summarized in Table E6 of Supplemental Digital Content 1). To ensure that the diminished A-V plasma nitrite difference in non-survivors was not confounded by differences in age between survivors and non-survivors, plasma nitrite A-V differences were examined in survivors and non-survivors stratified by median age. Arterial plasma nitrite was greater than venous plasma nitrite in the survivors with age ≤ 62 years (n=38, arterial = 89 [70-115] vs. venous = 54 [41-72] nM, p < 0.001) and survivors with age > 62 years (n=21, arterial = 128 [83-198] vs. venous = 62 [41-93] nM, p < 0.001). In contrast, arterial and venous plasma nitrite levels were similar in non-survivors ≤ 62 years (n=8, arterial = 67 [14-321] vs. venous = 54 [22-129] nM, p = 0.63) and non-survivors > 62 years (n=20, arterial = 144 [89-232] vs. venous = 112 [72-174] nM, p = 0.29). This analysis confirms that significant A-V plasma nitrite differences exist in survivors but not in non-survivors, independent of age category.

DISCUSSION

Our results demonstrate that septic patients have elevated venous WB and RBC nitrite concentrations and reduced venous SNOHb concentrations, blunting the A-V nitrite and SNOHb concentration differences observed in non-septic control subjects. In addition, sepsis non-survivors are distinguished from survivors by an isolated rise in venous plasma nitrite that narrows the plasma nitrite A-V difference. These findings have implications for understanding the role of intravascular NO delivery in the pathophysiology of human sepsis.

Sepsis-Associated Disruption of Nitrite-Mediated NO Delivery?

In vitro, nitrite and RBCs together vasodilate vascular tissue preparations, release NO gas, and produce iron-nitrosyl hemoglobin (FeNOHb) in an oxygen-dependent manner that is optimized at the hemoglobin P50 (oxygen tension corresponding to 50% hemoglobin oxygen saturation) (22, 26). This reaction also generates dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3), a potent nitrosating agent that produces nitrosothiols and SNOHb and decomposes to NO and nitrogen dioxide outside the RBC (25).

Our results support this model of NO delivery in humans. In control subjects, we find significant A-V plasma, whole blood, and RBC nitrite concentration differences (arterial > venous), confirming results from previous studies and suggesting systemic nitrite consumption (10, 12, 13). Moreover, we demonstrate significant A-V SNOHb concentration differences (venous > arterial), suggesting production of SNOHb in the systemic circulation. Previous studies of A-V SNOHb differences report conflicting results (14, 22, 27). Our large community-derived control group may have facilitated detection of significant A-V (venous > arterial) SNOHb concentration gradients under basal conditions. These findings underscore the necessity of studying a large healthy control group to establish expected NO metabolite concentrations in those with age and gender distributions similar to the septic cohort.

Venous WB and RBC nitrite levels were higher and venous SNOHb levels were lower in septic patients, narrowing A-V differences observed in control subjects. Additionally, sepsis non-survivors had higher venous plasma nitrite concentration than survivors, without significant A-V difference. These findings suggest impaired nitrite consumption in sepsis that is associated with mortality when involving both plasma and RBC nitrite pools.

The deoxyhemoglobin-mediated nitrite reductase pathway also predicts higher FeNOHb concentrations in vein vs. artery (28), a difference that should be obscured in sepsis patients, particularly non-survivors. The A-V RBC XNO difference (venous > arterial) was statistically significant in sepsis survivors but not in sepsis non-survivors (Table 4), consistent with impaired nitrite reduction according to this model.

We hypothesize that these results reflect dysregulated intra-erythrocytic deoxyhemoglobin-mediated nitrite reduction (Figure 4), a process postulated to occur in an intra-erythrocytic nitrite “metabolon” comprised of the RBC membrane, membrane associated proteins, deoxyhemoglobin, and nitrite (28). We speculate that endotoxin-induced changes in RBC membrane and cytoskeletal proteins (29, 30) may affect the RBC’s ability to facilitate nitrite-mediated NO activity.

Figure 4.

Figure 4

Proposed model for explaining diminished artery-to-vein NO metabolite concentration differences in sepsis. Panel A. Normal physiology. In resistance arterioles, RBCs become partially deoxygenated and the concentration of deoxyHb increases. DeoxyHb catalyzes the reduction of RBC nitrite (RBCNO2−) to form N2O3 and FeNOHb (22, 25). N203 S-nitrosates Hb forming SNOHb, then exits the RBC through a membrane-associated protein complex where it decomposes to NO (and nitrogen dioxide, not shown), augmenting microvascular blood flow (28). Plasma nitrite (PNO2−) enters the RBC to replenish RBCNO2− (42, 43). This metabolic pathway is reflected by NO metabolite concentrations changes in the draining vein. The net result is A-V differences in NO metabolite concentrations, with higher plasma and RBC nitrite (PNO2− and RBCNO2−) in artery vs. vein, but lower SNOHb and FeNOHb in artery vs. vein (10, 12, 13, 22). Panel B. Sepsis. RBC nitrite metabolism is impaired either because of sepsis-associated derangements of the RBC membrane-associated proteins involved in nitrite reduction and NO export (gray color of membrane protein) or lower concentration of deoxyHb (smaller font) (30, 31). The production of SNOHb and FeNOHb decline (dashed arrows and smaller font), and there is diminished RBC NO release (dashed arrows and smaller font), impairing microvascular blood flow (smaller arrow). The defects in membrane-associated proteins and RBCNO2− metabolism are not yet severe enough to affect PNO2− uptake. The net result is diminished A-V differences in all metabolites except PNO2−. Panel C. Lethal sepsis. The membrane-associated protein and metabolic defects are more severe, eliminating NO export (black color of membrane protein complex) and critically reducing blood flow (smaller arrow). The defects are now severe enough to impair PNO2− uptake by the RBC (gray color of membrane channel, larger PNO2− font). The net result is diminished A-V differences for all NO metabolites shown.

Lower availability of deoxyhemoglobin could also impair nitrite biotransformation, since the nitrite reducing capacity of hemoglobin is optimized when the oxygen saturation is approximately 50% (26). Septic shock is characterized by abnormally high mixed venous hemoglobin oxygen saturation (31), which could impair hemoglobin nitrite reductase activity. Sepsis-associated mitochondrial dysfunction or oxidative stress could also disrupt nitrite reductase activity in vascular and extra-vascular tissues (32, 33), independent of RBCs and hemoglobin.

It is possible that higher venous nitrite concentrations and blunted A-V nitrite differences could result from increased systemic nitrite production, rather than impaired nitrite utilization. Ceruloplasmin oxidizes NO to nitrite (34), so elevated systemic NO production and ceruloplasmin could explain the nitrite results (35). However, this mechanism does not explain lower venous SNOHb levels or blunted A-V SNOHb differences. Moreover, increased systemic NO production and oxidation to nitrite would be expected to raise both venous and arterial nitrite concentrations, since the half-life of nitrite in blood is approximately 42 minutes (36). Instead, we found that control subjects, sepsis patients, sepsis survivors and sepsis non-survivors all had similar arterial plasma, WB, and RBC nitrite levels. Impaired nitrite reduction to NO is a more likely explanation for our results, since it accounts for all of these findings.

Another possibility is that elevated nitrate levels cause higher venous nitrite levels. Recent reports indicate that nitrate reductases convert nitrate to nitrite in vivo (37). However, nitrate reduction to nitrite does not explain the absent SNOHb A-V gradient in sepsis, or the similar arterial levels of nitrite in all study groups. Impaired intra-erythrocytic nitrite reduction to NO accounts for all of these findings.

Comparison with Previous Studies

Arterial whole blood nitrite measurements using I3− chemiluminescence were recently reported in 30 ICU patients, including 12 patients with sepsis (17). Consistent with our results, no significant differences in arterial whole blood nitrite between septic and non-septic patients, or between those with and without renal dysfunction, were found.

Two reports describe markedly elevated SNOHb concentrations in six (16) and 12 (18) septic subjects, but artery-to-vein differences were not reported. Discrepancies between the results of Liu, et al. (18) and our SNOHb measurements are likely due to methodological differences (21). The I3− chemiluminescence method used herein has been validated repeatedly (24, 27, 38, 39), and is considered a preferred method for these analyses (40). Differences in sample size, patient characteristics, or the timing of blood sampling relative to sepsis diagnosis may account for discrepancies between our results and those of Doctor, et al (16). Elevated SNOHb concentrations have also been reported in animal models of sepsis (23, 41). However, species variation in NO metabolism makes these findings difficult to apply to humans (24).

Unadjusted arterial and venous nitrate concentrations were higher in sepsis patients compared to control subjects, but these differences were lost after adjustment for renal dysfunction. Villalpando, et al. (7) also found that elevated NOx concentrations in septic patients were tightly correlated with renal function, and further demonstrated that the fractional synthesis rate of NOx is reduced in septic vs. control subjects. Together, these data cast doubt on the commonly held view that human sepsis is characterized by excessive and detrimental NO production (1, 3, 6).

Study Limitations

The limitations of this study included practical constraints on the site and timing of NO metabolite measurements. Venous blood samples were obtained from peripheral veins in control subjects, but usually from central venous catheters in septic patients to minimize discomfort and risk. We are unaware of any published data indicating that venous NO metabolite concentrations differ in peripheral vs. central venous blood. Since venous plasma nitrite concentrations were nearly identical in control subjects (peripheral vein sampling) vs. septic patients (primarily central vein sampling, Figure 2 and Table 3), it is unlikely that there is a systematic difference in the nitrite concentrations of central vs. peripheral blood. Furthermore, venous samples (without matching arterial samples) were obtained in 45 of the sepsis patients just prior to hospital discharge, either peripherally (n=27) or centrally (n=18) depending on available venous access. There were no significant differences between peripherally- and centrally-obtained concentrations of nitrite or SNOHb (see additional results in Supplemental Digital Content 1).

Samples were obtained approximately 27 hours after severe sepsis or septic shock diagnosis. Earlier measurements may have allowed determination of the onset of dysregulated NO metabolism. However, we found no differences in nitrite or SNOHb when analyzed by tertiles of the time interval between sepsis diagnosis and sample collection, suggesting the abnormalities are established early (see Table E7 of Supplemental Digital Content 1).

This study required inclusion of a relatively healthy, non-hospitalized control group to establish baseline NO metabolite values in people of similar age to our sepsis patients. We cannot exclude the possibility that the results observed in our sepsis cohort also apply to other critically ill populations. If so, these results have even greater applicability. This possibility requires further study.

Conclusions

A-V nitrite and SNOHb differences are diminished in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock, and the absence of a significant A-V plasma nitrite difference is associated with mortality. The blunted A-V nitrite and SNOHb differences may signify a detrimental metabolic blockade of nitrite consumption that impairs microvascular blood flow. Further studies are required to determine relationships between nitrite consumption, RBC characteristics, and microvascular blood flow in sepsis. Such information could advance efforts to therapeutically harness NO activity and improve microvascular function in sepsis.

Supplementary Material

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We gratefully acknowledge the trust and generosity of our patients and their families.

Source of support: NIH K23 HL80077 & UL1 RR 024160

Footnotes

LIST OF SUPPLEMENTAL DIGITAL CONTENT • Supplemental Digital Content 1. Contains text and figures describing detailed analytic methods, and tables showing relevant statistical analyses and results. doc

REFERENCES

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