Long-term haemodynamic effects of octreotide on postprandial splanchnic hyperemia in humans: a placebo-controlled echo-doppler study
D Ludwig, S Terai, A Brüning, E F Stange, D Ludwig, S Terai, A Brüning, E F Stange
Abstract
Background: Octreotide is a potent splanchnic hypotensive somatostatin analogue effective in the treatment of acute variceal bleeding.
Aim: To study the effects of octreotide on basal and postprandial splanchnic and systemic haemodynamics, and hormonal changes in humans.
Methods: Twenty-four healthy volunteers were randomized to receive a liquid meal and either octreotide (OCT, 100 microg bolus) or placebo repeatedly every 4 h for 48 h. Splanchnic (Doppler ultrasound) and systemic haemodynamics (non-invasive cardiac monitoring) were assessed for 2 h on four consecutive days: one control day and after doses 1 (0 h), 7 (24 h) and 13 (48 h).
Results: The maximum postprandial increases in mean blood velocity of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA-Vmean +72%), portal (PBF +52%) and total hepatic blood flow (HBF +50%) observed in the placebo group, were abolished after the first dose of octreotide (SMA-Vmean -23%, P<0.01; PBF -22%, P<0.01; HBF -21%, P<0.01). Postprandial hyperemia was restored at the end of the 48-h study period, but baseline SMA-Vmean (placebo 40+/-12, OCT 29+/-11 cm/s, P<0.05) and PBF (placebo 1200+/-971, OCT 743+/-449 mL/min, P<0.05) remained significantly lower in the octreotide group. The postprandial decrease of systemic vascular resistance and increase of cardiac index were prevented by octreotide for 48 h.
Conclusions: Repeated 4-hourly bolus injections of octreotide reduce splanchnic blood flow for at least 48 h, but the prevention of food-induced splanchnic hyperemia is short-lasting.
Source: PubMed