# Characterization of Sublingual Microvascular Tortuosity in Steady-State Physiology and Septic Shock

**Authors:** Athanasios Chalkias, Nikolaos Papagiannakis, Konstantina Katsifa, Antonios Destounis, Athanasios Gravos, Sofia Kanakaki, Georgios Karapiperis, Faidra Koufaki, Athanasios Prekates, Paraskevi Tselioti

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines13030691 · Biomedicines · 2025-03-11

## TL;DR

This study shows that sublingual microvascular tortuosity is absent in healthy individuals but increases in septic shock patients, linking to impaired oxygen transport.

## Contribution

The study introduces capillary tortuosity as a novel indicator of hemodynamic coherence in critical illness.

## Key findings

- Sublingual capillary tortuosity is absent in steady-state physiology but significantly elevated in septic shock.
- Tortuosity correlates with alveolar-to-arterial oxygen gradient and oxygen debt in septic shock patients.
- Multiple hemodynamic and metabolic parameters differ significantly between steady-state and septic shock groups.

## Abstract

Background: The characteristics of hemodynamic coherence in healthy states and disease remain unknown. Capillary tortuosity is a morphologic variant of microcirculatory vessels, but its effects have generally not been considered in the assessment of tissue perfusion and oxygenation. We investigated the role of sublingual capillary tortuosity in the hemodynamic coherence of anesthetized adult individuals with steady-state physiology (ASA 1) and patients with septic shock requiring emergency abdominal surgery (ASA 4E and 5E). Methods: Sublingual macro and microcirculatory variables, oxygen transport, metabolic parameters, and the capillary tortuosity score (CTS) were assessed. Results: Mean (SD) CTS was 0.55 (0.76) and 3.31 (0.86) in the steady-state and septic shock group, respectively (p < 0.001). In patients with septic shock, CTS was significantly associated with alveolar-to-arterial oxygen gradient (r = 0.658, p = 0.015) and oxygen debt (r = −0.769, p = 0.002). Significant differences were also observed in Consensus Proportion of Perfused Vessels (PPV; p < 0.001), Consensus PPV (small) (p < 0.001), Microvascular Flow Index (p < 0.001), vessel diameter (p < 0.001) and length (p < 0.001), wall shear stress (p < 0.001), lactate (p < 0.001), oxygen extraction ratio (p = 0.001), arterial oxygen content (p < 0.001), venous oxygen content (p < 0.001), oxygen delivery (p < 0.001), oxygen consumption (p < 0.001), and oxygen debt (p = 0.002) between the two groups. Conclusions: Sublingual tortuosity was essentially absent in individuals with steady-state physiology. In contrast, it was significantly increased and associated with Alveolar-to-arterial oxygen gradient and oxygen debt in critically ill patients with septic shock.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Septic Shock (MESH:D012772), critically ill (MESH:D016638)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

83 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11939869/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11939869