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Critical care medicine · Apr 2007
ReviewBedside assessment of extravascular lung water by dilution methods: temptations and pitfalls.
- Frédéric Michard.
- Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Béclère Hospital-University Paris XI, France. michard.frederic@free.fr
- Crit. Care Med. 2007 Apr 1;35(4):1186-92.
ObjectivesTo review the advantages and limitations of dilution methods to assess extravascular lung water (EVLW) at the bedside and to discuss the clinical value of EVLW measurements.Data SourceExperimental and clinical studies were searched in PUBMED by using "extravascular lung water" and "dilution method" as keywords and further selected as studies investigating either the reliability or the clinical usefulness of dilution methods to assess EVLW. Related articles and the reference lists of selected studies were scanned for additional relevant references.ConclusionsBoth the double-indicator (thermo-dye) dilution and the single-indicator (cold saline) dilution methods showed close agreement with gravimetric measurement of EVLW (the reference ex vivo method) and have the advantage of being available at the bedside. Most limitations of dilution methods have been described in experimental conditions and lead to an underestimation of EVLW. These limitations include large pulmonary vascular obstruction, focal lung injury, and lung resection. Dilution methods provide an easy and clinically acceptable estimation of EVLW in most critically ill patients, including those with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Assessing EVLW may be useful to predict outcome, to diagnose pulmonary edema, to better characterize patients with ARDS, to guide fluid therapy, and to assess the value of new treatments or ventilatory strategies in patients with pulmonary edema.
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