• Anesthesiology · Oct 2001

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Changes in blood volume and hematocrit during acute preoperative volume loading with 5% albumin or 6% hetastarch solutions in patients before radical hysterectomy.

    • M Rehm, M Haller, V Orth, U Kreimeier, M Jacob, H Dressel, S Mayer, H Brechtelsbauer, and U Finsterer.
    • Klinik für Anästhesiologie, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Klinikum Grosshadern, Munich, Germany.
    • Anesthesiology. 2001 Oct 1; 95 (4): 849-56.

    BackgroundThe impact of acute preoperative volume loading with colloids on blood volume has not been investigated sufficiently.MethodsBefore surgery, in 20 patients undergoing major gynecologic procedures, volume loading was performed during anesthesia by infusing approximately 20 ml/kg of colloid at a rate of 90 ml/min (group I: 5% albumin solution; group II: 6% hetastarch solution; n = 10 each). Plasma volume (indocyanine green dilution technique), erythrocyte volume (labeling erythrocytes with fluorescein), hematocrit, total protein, and hetastarch plasma concentrations (group II) were measured before and 30 min after the end of infusion.ResultsMore than 1,350 ml of colloid (approximately 50% of the baseline plasma volume) were infused within 15 min. Thirty minutes after the infusion had been completed, blood volume was only 524 +/- 328 ml (group I) and 603 +/- 314 ml (group II) higher than before volume loading. The large vessel hematocrit (measured by centrifugation) dropped more than the whole body hematocrit, which was derived from double-label measurements of blood volume.ConclusionsThe double-label measurements of blood volume performed showed that 30 min after the infusion of approximately 20 ml/kg of 5% albumin or 6% hetastarch solution (within 15 min), only mean 38 +/- 21% and 43 +/- 26%, respectively, of the volume applied remained in the intravascular space. Different, i.e., earlier or later, measuring points, different infusion volumes, infusion rates, plasma substitutes, or possibly different tracers for plasma volume measurement might lead to different results concerning the kinetics of fluid or colloid extravasation.

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