How to monitor de-resuscitation (#ISICEM18 #IFAD2018)
How to guide fluid therapy during de-resuscitation
What are we talking about?
De-resuscitation is defined as active fluid removal in patients with GIPS (global incresaed permeability syndrome) or a positive cumulative fluid balance (fluid overload defined as 10% increase in body water). It can be done with diuretics or RRT with ultrafiltration. But the best option is to avoid it! Below is a list of potential parameters or monitoring tools that could help to assess fludi overload and how to guide and monitor the de-resuscitation phase.
Clinical parameters
- Body weight
- Fluid balance
- Cumulative FB
- Pitting edema
- 2nd and 3rd space fluid accumulation (orthopnee)
- JVP and HJR
- Capillary refill
Biochemical parameters
- AKI, urinanalysis
- Urine albumin/creat ratio
- Dilutional anemia
- Low albumin, protein
- Infection, inflammation
- Increased CLI (CRP/alb)
- Low osmol, COP
- BNP and NT-pro-BNP
Imaging
- Cardiomegaly, congestive hili, Kerley B-lines, pleural effusions, lung edema
- Ascites
- E/e’, LVOT VTI
- IVVCI (IVC > 2.5cm)
- LA volume >34ml/m2
- B-lines, comet-tail
Hemodynamic monitoring
- MAP, HR
- High CVP, PAOP
- High GEF/GEDVI
- High RVEF/RVEDVI
- Absence of FR
- Low PPV, SVV
- Negative PLR
- Negative EEO
Organ function monitoring
- EVLWI/PVPI
- P/F ratio
- ORI
- GIPS
- ICP, CPP (=MAP-ICP)
- IAP, APP (=MAP-IAP)
- AKI: biomarkers (N-GAL, cystatin C), CARS
Other techniques
- V/Q match
- TBW
- ECW/ICW ratio
- Volume excess
- IVF vs EVF
- Total CBV (technetium albumin)
- BVI
In this lecture given by @manu_malbrain during the 38th #ISICEM18 meeting held in Brussels the above mentioned concepts are explained and discussed.
Why wait, just start with fluid stewardship now avoiding fluid overload and GIPS:
Go to Video
Suggested Reading
Malbrain ML, Marik PE, Witters I, Cordemans C, Kirkpatrick AW, Roberts DJ, Van Regenmortel N: Fluid overload, de-resuscitation, and outcomes in critically ill or injured patients: a systematic review with suggestions for clinical practice. Anaesthesiol Intensive Ther 2014, 46(5):361-380.