Literature DB >> 32102639

Haemodynamic effect of a 20% albumin fluid bolus in post-cardiac surgery patients.

Salvatore L Cutuli1, Laurent Bitker2, Eduardo A Osawa2, Zachary O'Brien2, Emmanuel Canet2, Fumitaka Yanase2, Paolo Ancona2, Anthony Wilson2, Luca Lucchetta2, Mark Kubicki2, Maria Cronhjort2, Luca Cioccari2, Lea Peck2, Helen Young2, Glenn M Eastwood2, Johan Mårtensson2, Neil J Glassford2, Rinaldo Bellomo2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study the cardiovascular effect over 30 minutes following the end of fluid bolus therapy (FBT) with 20% albumin in patients after cardiac surgery.
DESIGN: Prospective observational study.
SETTING: Intensive care unit of a tertiary university-affiliated hospital. PARTICIPANTS: Twenty post-cardiac surgery mechanically ventilated patients with a clinical decision to administer FBT. INTERVENTION: FBT with a 100 mL bolus of 20% albumin. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Cardiac index (CI) response was defined by a ≥ 15% increase, while mean arterial pressure (MAP) response was defined by a ≥ 10% increase.
RESULTS: The most common indication for FBT was hypotension (40%). Median duration of infusion was 7 minutes (interquartile range [IQR], 3-9 min). At the end of FBT, five patients (25%) showed a CI response, which increased to almost half in the following 30 minutes and dissipated in one patient. MAP response occurred in 11 patients (55%) and dissipated in five patients (45%) by a median of 6 minutes (IQR, 6-10 min). CI and MAP responses coexisted in four patients (20%). An intrabolus MAP response occurred in 17 patients (85%) but dissipated in 11 patients (65%) within a median of 7 minutes (IQR, 2-11 min). On regression analysis, faster fluid bolus administration predicted MAP increase at the end of the bolus.
CONCLUSION: In post-cardiac surgery patients, CI response to 20% albumin FBT was not congruous with MAP response over 30 minutes. Although hypotension was the main indication for FBT and a MAP response occurred in most of patients, such response was maximal during the bolus, dissipated in a few minutes, and was dissociated from the CI response.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32102639

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Crit Care Resusc        ISSN: 1441-2772            Impact factor:   2.159


  1 in total

1.  An observational study of intensivists' expectations and effects of fluid boluses in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Olof Wall; Salvatore Cutuli; Anthony Wilson; Glenn Eastwood; Adam Lipka-Falck; Daniel Törnberg; Rinaldo Bellomo; Maria Cronhjort
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2022-03-24       Impact factor: 3.240

  1 in total

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