collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23292589/new-management-strategy-for-fluid-resuscitation-quantifying-volume-in-the-first-48-hours-after-burn-injury
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Katrina B Mitchell, Elie Khalil, Ann Brennan, Huibo Shao, Angela Rabbitts, Nicole E Leahy, Roger W Yurt, James J Gallagher
This study evaluated a 24-hour resuscitation protocol, established a formula to quantify resuscitation volume for the second 24 hours, described the relationship between the first and second 24 hours, and identified which patients required high volumes. A protocol for patients with burn >15% TBSA was implemented in 2009. Initial fluid was based on the Parkland calculation and adjusted to meet a goal urine output. Protocol compliance was defined as appropriate fluid titration to maintain urine output. Resuscitation ratio in the second 24 hours was tabulated as total fluid /(evaporative loss + maintenance fluid + estimated colloid)...
January 2013: Journal of Burn Care & Research: Official Publication of the American Burn Association
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22617510/does-a-conservative-fluid-management-strategy-in-the-perioperative-management-of-lung-resection-patients-reduce-the-risk-of-acute-lung-injury
#22
REVIEW
Robert G Evans, Babu Naidu
A best evidence topic in thoracic surgery was written according to a structured protocol. The question addressed was whether a conservative fluid management strategy in the perioperative management of lung resection patients is associated with a reduced incidence of postoperative acute lung injury (PALI) and/or acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) in the recovery period. Sixty-seven papers were found using the reported search, of which 13 level III and 1 level IV evidence studies represented the best evidence to answer the question...
September 2012: Interactive Cardiovascular and Thoracic Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21760565/fluid-overload-is-associated-with-impaired-oxygenation-and-morbidity-in-critically-ill-children
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ayse A Arikan, Michael Zappitelli, Stuart L Goldstein, Amrita Naipaul, Larry S Jefferson, Laura L Loftis
RATIONALE: Fluid overload is common in the critically ill and is thought to contribute to oxygenation failure and mortality. Since increasing disease severity often requires more fluid for resuscitation, it is unclear whether fluid overload is a causative factor in morbidity or is simply an indicator of disease severity. OBJECTIVE: Investigate the association between fluid overload and oxygenation while controlling for severity of illness by daily Pediatric Logistic Organ Dysfunction scores...
May 2012: Pediatric Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21645639/lactated-ringer-s-solution-reduces-systemic-inflammation-compared-with-saline-in-patients-with-acute-pancreatitis
#24
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Bechien U Wu, James Q Hwang, Timothy H Gardner, Kathryn Repas, Ryan Delee, Song Yu, Benjamin Smith, Peter A Banks, Darwin L Conwell
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Aggressive fluid resuscitation is recommended for initial management of acute pancreatitis. We performed a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of a goal-directed fluid resuscitation protocol on systemic inflammation in patients with acute pancreatitis. We then determined the impact of resuscitation with lactated Ringer's solution, compared with normal saline. METHODS: We performed a randomized controlled trial of 40 patients with acute pancreatitis at 3 New England hospitals from May 2009-February 2010...
August 2011: Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20173320/fluid-overload-in-critically-ill-patients-with-acute-kidney-injury
#25
REVIEW
Jorge Cerda, Geoffrey Sheinfeld, Claudio Ronco
Fluid overload may occur in critically ill patients as a result of aggressive resuscitation therapies. In such circumstances, persistent fluid overload must be avoided since it does not benefit the patient while it may be harmful. In the septic patient, early volume expansion seems to be beneficial. Beyond that threshold, when organ failure develops, fluid overload has been shown to be associated with worse outcomes in multiple disparate studies. One well-designed randomized controlled trial showed the benefit of a conservative fluid management strategy based on limited fluid intake and use of furosemide in such patients...
2010: Blood Purification
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18813052/a-rational-approach-to-perioperative-fluid-management
#26
REVIEW
Daniel Chappell, Matthias Jacob, Klaus Hofmann-Kiefer, Peter Conzen, Markus Rehm
Replacement of assumed preoperative deficits, in addition to generous substitution of an unsubstantiated increased insensible perspiration and third space loss, plays an important role in current perioperative fluid regimens. The consequence is a positive fluid balance and weight gain of up to 10 kg, which may be related to severe complications. Because the intravascular blood volume remains unchanged and insensible perspiration is negligible, the fluid must accumulate inside the body. This concept brings into question common liberal infusion regimens...
October 2008: Anesthesiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18671831/fluid-balance-as-a-biomarker-impact-of-fluid-overload-on-outcome-in-critically-ill-patients-with-acute-kidney-injury
#27
EDITORIAL
Sean M Bagshaw, Patrick D Brophy, Dinna Cruz, Claudio Ronco
Fluid therapy is fundamental to the acute resuscitation of critically ill patients. In general, however, early and appropriate goal-directed fluid therapy contributes to a degree of fluid overload in most if not all patients. Recent data imply that a threshold may exist beyond which, after acute resuscitation, additional fluid therapy may cause harm. In patients with acute kidney injury and/or oliguria, a positive fluid balance is almost universal. Few studies have examined the impact of fluid balance on clinical outcomes in critically ill adults with acute kidney injury...
2008: Critical Care: the Official Journal of the Critical Care Forum
https://read.qxmd.com/read/18187750/fluid-therapy-in-resuscitated-sepsis-less-is-more
#28
REVIEW
Lakshmi Durairaj, Gregory A Schmidt
Fluid infusion may be lifesaving in patients with severe sepsis, especially in the earliest phases of treatment. Following initial resuscitation, however, fluid boluses often fail to augment perfusion and may be harmful. In this review, we seek to compare and contrast the impact of fluids in early and later sepsis; show that much fluid therapy is clinically ineffective in patients with severe sepsis; explore the detrimental aspects of excessive volume infusion; examine how clinicians assess the intravascular volume state; appraise the potential for dynamic indexes to predict fluid responsiveness; and recommend a clinical approach...
January 2008: Chest
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17646507/liberal-versus-restrictive-fluid-management-in-knee-arthroplasty-a-randomized-double-blind-study
#29
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Kathrine Holte, Billy B Kristensen, Lotte Valentiner, Nicolai B Foss, Henrik Husted, Henrik Kehlet
BACKGROUND: There are few data describing the relationship between amount of perioperative fluid and organ function. In this study we investigated the effects of two levels of intravascular fluid administration ("liberal" versus "restrictive") in knee arthroplasty on physiological recovery as the primary outcome variable. METHODS: In a double-blind study, 48 ASA I-III patients undergoing fast-track elective knee arthroplasty were randomized to restrictive or liberal perioperative intravascular fluid administration...
August 2007: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17242092/quantitative-analysis-of-fluid-balance-during-abdominal-surgery
#30
COMPARATIVE STUDY
Tsuneo Tatara, Chikara Tashiro
BACKGROUND: Surgical injury causes acute sequestration of interstitial fluid in injured tissue. Fluid sequestration treated with IV fluid administration can lead to postoperative complications related to excessive intravascular volume. Quantitative prediction of interstitial fluid sequestration may foster a better understanding of the relationship between fluid administered and the resulting balance between intra- and extravascular fluid. METHODS: We developed a mathematical model describing the dynamic distribution and transport of fluid and proteins with the goal of quantifying the balance of fluid between intra- and extravascular compartments...
February 2007: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17081224/perioperative-fluid-management-in-renal-transplantation-a-narrative-review-of-the-literature
#31
REVIEW
Peter Schnuelle, Fokko Johannes van der Woude
Adequate volume maintenance is essential to prevent acute renal failure during major surgery or to ensure graft function after renal transplantation. The various recommendations on the optimum fluid therapy are based, at best, on sparse evidence only from observational studies. This article reviews the literature on perioperative fluid management in renal transplantation. Crystalloid solutions not exerting any specific side-effects are the first choice for volume replacement in kidney transplantation. The use of colloids should be restricted to patients with severe intravascular volume deficits necessitating high volume restoration...
December 2006: Transplant International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/16931679/intravascular-fluid-administration-and-hemodynamic-performance-during-open-abdominal-surgery
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christer H Svensén, Joel Olsson, Robert G Hahn
We studied whether central hemodynamics measured by a pulmonary artery catheter can serve as a pharmacodynamic expression of fluid therapy in 10 patients undergoing open abdominal surgery. We examined how closely hemodynamic variables follow plasma dilution, which is an index of plasma volume expansion, during and after an IV infusion of 25 mL/kg of lactated Ringer's solution over 45 min. Pulmonary artery wedge pressure and central venous pressure responded to IV fluid with an increase that correlated with accompanying plasma dilution...
September 2006: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15845718/a-randomized-double-blind-comparison-of-lactated-ringer-s-solution-and-0-9-nacl-during-renal-transplantation
#33
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Catherine M N O'Malley, Robert J Frumento, Mark A Hardy, Alan I Benvenisty, Tricia E Brentjens, John S Mercer, Elliott Bennett-Guerrero
Normal saline (NS; 0.9% NaCl) is administered during kidney transplantation to avoid the risk of hyperkalemia associated with potassium-containing fluids. Recent evidence suggests that NS may be associated with adverse effects that are not seen with balanced-salt fluids, e.g., lactated Ringer's solution (LR). We hypothesized that NS is detrimental to renal function in kidney transplant recipients. Adults undergoing kidney transplantation were enrolled in a prospective, randomized, double-blind clinical trial of NS versus LR for intraoperative IV fluid therapy...
May 2005: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15781528/perioperative-fluid-management-and-clinical-outcomes-in-adults
#34
REVIEW
Michael P W Grocott, Michael G Mythen, Tong J Gan
The administration of IV fluid to avoid dehydration, maintain an effective circulating volume, and prevent inadequate tissue perfusion should be considered, along with the maintenance of sleep, pain relief, and muscular relaxation, a core element of the perioperative practice of anesthesia. Knowledge of the effects of different fluids has increased in recent years, and the choice of fluid type in a variety of clinical situations can now be rationally guided by an understanding of the physicochemical and biological properties of the various crystalloid and colloid solutions available...
April 2005: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15373958/fluid-electrolytes-and-nutrition-physiological-and-clinical-aspects
#35
Dileep N Lobo
Fluid and electrolyte balance is often poorly understood and inappropriate prescribing can cause increased post-operative morbidity and mortality. The efficiency of the physiological response to a salt or water deficit, developed through evolution, contrasts with the relatively inefficient mechanism for dealing with salt excess. Saline has a Na+:Cl- of 1:1 and can produce hyperchloraemic acidosis, renal vasoconstriction and reduced glomerular filtration rate. In contrast, the more physiological Hartmann's solution with a Na+:Cl- of 1...
August 2004: Proceedings of the Nutrition Society
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