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Curr Opin Crit Care · Oct 2015
ReviewFluid bolus therapy: monitoring and predicting fluid responsiveness.
- Andrea Carsetti, Maurizio Cecconi, and Andrew Rhodes.
- Department of Intensive Care Medicine, St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and St George's University of London, London, UK.
- Curr Opin Crit Care. 2015 Oct 1; 21 (5): 388-94.
Purpose Of ReviewWhen a condition of hypoperfusion has been identified, clinicians must decide whether fluids may increase blood flow or whether other therapeutic approaches are needed. For this purpose, several tests and parameters have been introduced in clinical practice to predict fluid responsiveness and guide therapy.Recent FindingsFluid challenge is the gold standard test to assess the preload dependence of the patients. Moreover, several parameters and tests avoiding fluid administration are now available. Pulse pressure variation and stroke volume variation are based on heart-lung interaction and can be used to assess fluid responsiveness. These parameters have several limitations and can really be used in a limited number of critically ill patients. End-expiratory occlusion test and passive leg raising have been proposed to overcome these limitations. The aim of resuscitation is to increase blood flow and perfusion pressure. Dynamic arterial elastance has been recently proposed to predict the pressure response after fluid challenge in preload-dependent patients. Finally, the effects of volume expansion of hemodynamic parameters do not necessarily reach the microcirculation, which should also be assessed.SummaryNowadays, several parameters are available to assess fluid responsiveness. Clinicians need to know all of them, with their limitations, without forgetting that the final aim of all therapies is to improve the microcirculation.
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