| Literature DB >> 26958978 |
Rafaela Milanesi1, Rita Catalina Aquino Caregnato2.
Abstract
There is a growing request for measuring intra-abdominal pressure in critically ill patients with acute abdominal pain to be clarified. Summarizing the research results on measurement of vesical intra-abdominal pressure and analyzing the level of evidence were the purposes of this integrative literature review, carried out based on the databases LILACS, MEDLINE and PubMed, from 2005 to July 2012. Twenty articles were identified, in that, 12 literature reviews, 4 descriptive and exploratory studies, 2 expert opinions, one prospective cohort study and one was an experience report. The vesical intra-abdominal pressure measurement was considered gold standard. There are variations in the technique however, but some common points were identified: complete supine position, in absence of abdominal contracture, in the end of expiration and expressed in mmHg. Most research results indicate keeping the transducer zeroed at the level of the mid-axillary line at the iliac crest level, and instill 25mL of sterile saline. Strong evidence must be developed. RESUMO Em pacientes críticos com quadros abdominais agudos a esclarecer é crescente a solicitação da aferição da pressão intra-abdominal. Sintetizar resultados de pesquisas sobre a mensuração da pressão intra-abdominal pela via vesical e analisar o nível de evidência foram os objetivos desta revisão integrativa da literatura, realizada nas bases LILACS, MEDLINE e PubMed, no período de 2005 a julho de 2012. Identificaram-se 20 artigos, sendo 12 revisões de literatura, 4 estudos exploratório-descritivos, 2 opiniões de especialistas, 1 estudo de coorte prospectivo e 1 relato de experiência. O método vesical para mensuração da pressão intra-abdominal foi considerado padrão-ouro. Existem variações na técnica, entretanto pontos em comum foram identificados: posição supina completa, na ausência de contratura abdominal, ao final da expiração e expressa em mmHg. A maioria indica posicionar o ponto zero do transdutor na linha axilar média, ao nível da crista ilíaca e instilar 25ml de solução salina estéril. Evidências fortes precisam ser desenvolvidas.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26958978 PMCID: PMC5234758 DOI: 10.1590/S1679-45082016RW3088
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Einstein (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1679-4508
Summary of articles focusing on intensivists’ knowledge of intra-abdominal pressure
| Objetives | Features | Results |
|---|---|---|
| To investigate IAP and IAH knowledge, recognition and management in Italian ICUs( | Type: exploratory-descriptive study | IAP was measured in 51 ICUs. Lack of IAP measurement was due to lack of a specific kit or unawareness of the technique. The intravesical method was the only one employed. Frequency of serial measurements: every 4 hours in the presence of risk factors (64.7%), or in emergency surgical procedures (21.5%) |
| Place: Italy | ||
| Sample: 77 physicians in charge of ICUs | ||
| Instrument: questionnaire comprising 9 close-ended questions | ||
| To assess knowledge of ACS, clinical application of IAP measurement, measurement methods and frequency, and criteria for decompressive laparotomy( | Type: exploratory-descriptive study | IAP was measured by 104 interviewees in suspected cases of IAH/ACS (93.9%). The intravesical method was the only one employed. Frequency: 44.2% in the presence of clinical suspicion; 26.9% every 4 to 8 hours; 15.4% every zero to 4 hours; 10.9% every 12 hours; 2.9% once every 24 hours |
| Place: United Kingdom | ||
| Sample: 137 physicians in charge of ICUs | ||
| Sample: 137 physicians in charge of ICUs | ||
| To assess physician's knowledge of ACS and respective management characteristics( | Type: exploratory-descriptive study | IAP was measured in patients clinically predisposed to ACS (51.4%) using the intravesical method (97%), with instillation of 60-100mL of fluid (54.3%), at 4-to-8-hour intervals (60%). Methodological issues were among the major doubts reported in questionnaires |
| Place: Brazil | ||
| Sample: 90 physicians working at 10 ICUs in | ||
| Rio de Janeiro | ||
| Instrument: questionnaire comprising 12 close-ended questions | ||
| To determine the current level of understanding and clinical management of IAH/ACS among intensivists working in Chinese hospitals( | Type: exploratory-descriptive study | IAP was measured by 75 physicians in suspected cases of IAH (88%); the intravesical method was used (100%) with patients in the supine position (97.3%) and using 50-100 mL of fluid (46.7%); the pubic symphysis was taken as the zero-reference point (68%). Out of 33 physicians not measuring IAP, 36.4% were not able to interpret results and 27.3% had never admitted patients suffering from IAH |
| Place: China | ||
| Sample: 108 physicians | ||
| Instrument: questionnaire comprising 20 close-ended questions |
IAP: intra-abdominal pressure; IAH: intra-abdominal hypertension; ICU: intensive care unit; ACS: abdominal compartment syndrome.
Summary of articles discussing general aspects of intravesical intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) measurement
| Objetives | Features | Results |
|---|---|---|
| To provide clinical update for accurate ACS diagnosis and for adequate management and intervention, with particular emphasis on intensive care( | Type: literature review | Simple, low cost; measurements in mmHg, at end-expiration, supine position, absence of abdominal contractions. Instillation of 25mL, transducer zeroed at mid-axillary line level and connected to 3-way stopcock inserted between vesical catheter and drainage bag. Measured in the presence of two or more risk factors every 4-6 hours; every hour in severe organ dysfunction. Discontinued in absence of acute organ dysfunction or if IAP <10mmHg for 24-48 hours |
| Place: Brazil | ||
| To provide updated information, discuss organ dysfunction mechanisms, technique, therapeutic recommendations and treatment( | Type: literature review | Reference standard for intermittent measurement. Volume: 20-25mL. Expressed in mmHg, measured at end-expiration, in complete supine position, in the absence of abdominal muscle contractions, with transducer zeroed at mid-axillary line level. Recent studies investigated effects of different zero-reference points and elevated head position |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| To give a broad overview of IAH/ACS, the role of nurses in assessment, monitoring and collaborative management( | Type: literature review. | Physical examination not sensitive for IAH detection. Intravesical method is the gold standard for indirect measurement, despite variations; technique adopted is: 20-25mL instillation volume, supine position, zero-reference point at pubic symphysis level, every 4-6 hours in patients at risk, until underlying cause resolution is obtained and IAP ≤12mmHg for 24-48 hours |
| Place: United States | ||
| To serve as reference for recommendations defined at the III World ACS Conference( | Type: experience report | Twelve consensus definitions. About the technique: reference standard for intermittent measurement; in mmHg, at end-expiration, in complete supine position, in the absence of abdominal muscle contractions, transducer zeroed on the mid-axillary line, at iliac crest level, 25mL maximum saline solution instillation volume |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| To describe diagnostic criteria, risk populations, monitoring techniques and IAH/ACS management( | Type: literature review | Gold standard due to reliability, simplicity and low invasiveness. Measured at end-expiration, zeroed at phlebostatic axis level, instillation of 25-50mL. Transient increase in sedation suggested to reduce interferences. Potential routine protocol: every 2 hours for the first 8 hours following ICU admission; every 4 hours over the next 8 hours; and every 8 hours over the following 24 hours |
| Place: United States | ||
| To review risk factors for IAH/ACS, related conditions, pathophysiology, diagnostic methods and therapeutic advancements( | Type: literature review | Physical examination and diagnosis have low sensitivity for IAH detection. Intravesical method simple, reliable, reproducible, minimally invasive, low cost, measured at end-expiration, in supine position, zero-reference point on the mid-axillary line at iliac crest level, in the absence of abdominal contractions, instillation of 25mL saline solution |
| Place: Spain | ||
| To provide a general overview and present historical aspects, definitions, pathophysiology and suggestions for IAH/ACS management( | Type: literature review | Physical examination and imaging modalities not sensitive for IAH detection. Safe, efficient monitoring: ≥2 risk factors, one baseline measurement; if IAH, serial measurements. Intravesical method is simple, low cost, thought to be the gold standard. Measurements taken with patient in supine position |
| Place: Greece | ||
| To present currently accepted consensus definitions regarding IAH and ACS diagnosis and treatment( | Type: literature review | Clinical assessment has low sensitivity in detection of increased IAP. Intravesical method more widely employed due to simplicity, low cost and minimal risk. Expressed in mmHg (=1.36cmH2O), at end-expiration, in complete supine position, in the absence of abdominal muscle contractions, zero-reference point at mid-axillary line level, instillation volume ≤25mL |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| To discuss etiology, epidemiological data, measurement techniques, diagnosis, complications, prevention | Type: literature review | Worldwide acceptance due to simplicity and minimal cost, but technique varies. Measured in mmHg, at end-expiration, in complete supine position, in the absence of abdominal contractions, with transducer zeroed at mid-axillary line level and maximal saline solution instillation volume of 25mL and treatment( |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| Not mentioned( | Type: literature review | Clinical assessment inaccurate for IAH detection. Measure: upon admission of critically-ill patient, in the presence of risk factors or clinical deterioration. Other hollow organs were described, but none as simple and user-friendly as the bladder. Patient in supine position, pressure module zeroed on the mid-axillary line at iliac crest level |
| Place: United States | ||
| To discuss etiology, epidemiological data, IAP measurement, diagnosis, complications, prevention and treatment options for ACS( | Type: literature review | Physical examination and imaging modalities inaccurate for diagnosis but indicate causes. IAP measured at one site is assumed to reflect IAP as a whole. Intravesical method is the gold standard due to simplicity and minimal cost. Several tools have been developed, such as Foley Manometer or AbViser stopcock. Continuous technique has been described, but is not widely used |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| Not mentioned( | Type: literature review | Patients must be in complete supine position and abdominal muscle contraction must be absent; transducer is zeroed at pubic symphysis or mid-axillary line level. Instillation of 25mL of sterile saline solution; values obtained must be expressed in mmHg |
| Place: Spain | ||
| Not mentioned( | Type: literature review | Clinical assessment has low sensitivity (40%) for IAH estimation. IAP increasingly employed due to relevance of early IAH detection and management; transducer zeroed at pubis level. Original technique employed 50-100mL but recent study reported better correlation with IAP when 50mL are used |
| Place: Chile | ||
| Not mentioned( | Type: specialist's opinion | Despite increased attention given to topic, general clinical application has not been established to date. Current consensus on ideal measurement method or time point is lacking. Future research efforts should aim to improve consensus definitions concerning IAH and ACS |
| Place: Belgium |
ACS: abdominal compartment syndrome; IAH: intra-abdominal hypertension; IAP: intra-abdominal pressure; ICU: intensive care unit.
Summary of articles focusing on ideal saline solution instillation volume for intra-abdominal pressure measurement
| Objetives | Features | Results |
|---|---|---|
| To assess the effect of different saline instillation volumes during intravesical pressure measurement( | Type: prospective cohort study | The intravesical method is the gold standard for indirect measurement. Volumes described ranged from 50 to 300mL. Authors concluded: >50mL may overestimate true IAP; 25mL may be enough; vesical compliance varies within and between patients; a uniform, standardized, accurate and reproducible method is required for multicenter studies |
| Place: Belgium | ||
| Sample: 13 sedated patients submitted to mechanical ventilation | ||
| To describe the significance of saline infusion volume standardization in IAP monitoring( | Type: specialist's opinion | The intravesical method is the standard technique for indirect measurement, but there's little standardization in literature. The most accurate volume is not clear. Small volumes tend to be employed, as discussed in the studies by Malbrain et al.( |
| Place: Canada |
IAP: intra-abdominal pressure.
Figure 1Intra-abdominal pressure measurement using the pressure transducer technique
Figure 2Intra-abdominal pressure measurement using the pressure transducer technique and a three-way stopcock system
Figure 3Intra-abdominal pressure measurement using the U-tube technique
Figure 4Intra-abdominal pressure measurement using the Y-set technique