| Literature DB >> 26594361 |
Abstract
Although fluid resuscitation of patients having acute circulatory failure is essential, avoiding unnecessary administration of fluids in these patients is also important. Fluid responsiveness (FR) is defined as the ability of the left ventricle to increase its stroke volume (SV) in response to fluid administration. The objective of this review is to provide the recent advances in the detection of FR and simplify the physiological basis, advantages, disadvantages, and cut-off values for each method. This review also highlights the present gaps in literature and provides future thoughts in the field of FR. Static methods are generally not recommended for the assessment of FR. Dynamic methods for the assessment of FR depend on heart-lung interactions. Pulse pressure variation (PPV) and stroke volume variation (SVV) are the most famous dynamic measures. Less-invasive dynamic parameters include plethysmographic-derived parameters, variation in blood flow in large arteries, and variation in the diameters of central veins. Dynamic methods for the assessment of FR have many limitations; the most important limitation is spontaneous breathing activity. Fluid challenge techniques were able to overcome most of the limitations of the dynamic methods. Passive leg raising is the most popular fluid challenge method. More simple techniques have been recently introduced such as the mini-fluid challenge and 10-s fluid challenge. The main limitation of fluid challenge techniques is the need to trace the effect of the fluid challenges on SV (or any of its derivatives) using a real-time monitor. More research is needed in the field of FR taking into consideration not only the accuracy of the method but also the ease of implementation, the applicability on a wider range of patients, the time needed to apply each method, and the feasibility of its application by acute care physicians with moderate and low experience.Entities:
Keywords: Acute circulatory failure; Fluid challenge; Fluid responsiveness; Heart-lung interaction
Year: 2015 PMID: 26594361 PMCID: PMC4653888 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-015-0117-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Dynamic methods for the detection of FR
| Parameter | Cut-off value (%) | Evidence | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| SPV [ | NA | Cohort | Affected by airway and pleural pressure [ |
| PPV [ | 13 | Meta-analysis | Needs special monitor; needs arterial line |
| SVV [ | 14 | Cohort | Needs either arterial line (plus special monitor) or esophageal Doppler |
| SOI [ | 11 | Cohort | Needs esophageal Doppler |
| POP [ | 9.5–15 | Meta-analysis | Needs special pulse oximeter |
| PVI [ | 9.5–15 | Meta-analysis | Needs Masimo device |
| IVC variation [ | 12–21 | Meta-analysis | Needs ultrasound; difficult in abdominal surgical cases; cannot be used intraoperatively |
| SVC variation [ | 29–36 | Cohort | Needs trans-esophageal echocardiography |
| IJV variation [ | 18 | Cohort | Needs ultrasound |
| Subaortic VTI [ | NA | Animal study | Needs echocardiography; needs good operator experience; not tried in humans yet |
| Aortic velocity variation [ | 12–18 | Cohort | Needs echocardiography or esophageal Doppler |
| Carotid velocity variation [ | 11–14 | Cohort | Needs ultrasound |
SPV systolic pressure variation, PPV pulse pressure variation, SVV stroke volume variation, SOI stroke output index, POP pulse oximetry plethysmographic waveform amplitude, PVI Plethysmographic variability index, IVC inferior vena cava, SVC superior vena cava, IJV internal jugular vein, VTI velocity time integral, NA not available
Fluid challenge methods for the detection of FR
| Parameter | Cut-off value | Evidence | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| PLR [ | 10 % increase in aortic flow or CI | Meta-analysis | Not feasible in intraoperative situations and some surgical patients; needs CO monitoring |
| EEO [ | 5 % increase in CO | Cohort | Needs MV; needs CO monitoring |
| PEEP-induced increase in CVP [ | 1.5 mmHg | Cohort | Tried only in cardiac surgery patients |
| PEEP-induced decrease in MAP [ | NA | Cohort | Useful only in identifying non-responders |
| Arm occlusion pressure [ | 21.9 mmHg | Cohort | Tried only in cardiac surgery patients |
| Mini-fluid challenge [ | 10 % increase in subaortic VTI | Cohort | Needs echocardiography with experienced operator |
| 10-s fluid challenge [ | 9 % increase in CO or SV | Cohort | Needs CO or SV monitoring |
PLR passive leg raising, EEO end expiratory occlusion, PEEP positive end expiratory pressure, CVP central venous pressure, MAP mean arterial pressure, CO cardiac output, CI cardiac index, SV stroke volume, BP blood pressure, VTI velocity time integral, NA not available