Literature DB >> 20428001

Diuretic therapy in fluid-overloaded and heart failure patients.

Rinaldo Bellomo, John R Prowle, Jorge E Echeverri.   

Abstract

Diuretics are the most commonly used drugs to treat clinically diagnosed fluid overload in patients with heart failure. There is no conclusive evidence that they alter major outcomes such as survival to hospital discharge or time in hospital compared to other therapies. However, they demonstrably achieve fluid removal in the majority of patients, restore dry body weight, improve the breathlessness of pulmonary edema and are unlikely to be subjected to a large double-blind randomized controlled trial in this setting because of lack of equipoise. The effective and safe use of diuretics requires physiological understanding of the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of diuretic therapy, an appreciation of the clinical goals of diuretic therapy, the application of physiological targeting of dose, an understanding of the effects of hemodynamic impairment on their ability to achieve fluid removal, an appreciation of the effects of combinations of different diuretics in patients refractory to single agents and an understanding of the most common side effects of such therapy. The use of continuous infusions of loop diuretics, sometimes combined with carbonic anhydrase inhibitors and/or aldosterone antagonists and/or thiazide diuretics can prove particularly effective in patients with advanced heart failure. Such therapy often requires more intensive monitoring than available in medical wards. If diuretic therapy fails to achieve its clinical goals, ultrafiltration by semipermeable membranes is reliably effective in achieving targeted fluid removal. The combination of diuretic therapy and/or ultrafiltration can achieve volume control in essentially all patients with heart failure. Copyright (c) 64\C S. Karger AG, Basel.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20428001     DOI: 10.1159/000313728

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Contrib Nephrol        ISSN: 0302-5144            Impact factor:   1.580


  5 in total

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Authors:  Rinaldo Bellomo; Claudio Ronco; Ravindra L Mehta; Pierre Asfar; Julie Boisramé-Helms; Michael Darmon; Jean-Luc Diehl; Jacques Duranteau; Eric A J Hoste; Joannes-Boyau Olivier; Matthieu Legrand; Nicolas Lerolle; Manu L N G Malbrain; Johan Mårtensson; Heleen M Oudemans-van Straaten; Jean-Jacques Parienti; Didier Payen; Sophie Perinel; Esther Peters; Peter Pickkers; Eric Rondeau; Miet Schetz; Christophe Vinsonneau; Julia Wendon; Ling Zhang; Pierre-François Laterre
Journal:  Ann Intensive Care       Date:  2017-05-04       Impact factor: 6.925

Review 2.  Diuretics and the kidney.

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Review 3.  Acute kidney injury after lung transplantation: a narrative review.

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4.  Pulmonary Pressure Necrosis due to Chronic Pleural Effusion after Heart Transplantation: A Case Report.

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Journal:  Thorac Cardiovasc Surg Rep       Date:  2014-05-29

Review 5.  Fluid overload in the ICU: evaluation and management.

Authors:  Rolando Claure-Del Granado; Ravindra L Mehta
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2016-08-02       Impact factor: 2.388

  5 in total

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