| Literature DB >> 32449147 |
Manu L N G Malbrain1,2,3, Thomas Langer4,5, Djillali Annane6, Luciano Gattinoni7, Paul Elbers8, Robert G Hahn9, Inneke De Laet10, Andrea Minini11, Adrian Wong12, Can Ince13, David Muckart14,15, Monty Mythen16, Pietro Caironi17,18, Niels Van Regenmortel10,10.
Abstract
Intravenous fluid administration should be considered as any other pharmacological prescription. There are three main indications: resuscitation, replacement, and maintenance. Moreover, the impact of fluid administration as drug diluent or to preserve catheter patency, i.e., fluid creep, should also be considered. As for antibiotics, intravenous fluid administration should follow the four Ds: drug, dosing, duration, de-escalation. Among crystalloids, balanced solutions limit acid-base alterations and chloride load and should be preferred, as this likely prevents renal dysfunction. Among colloids, albumin, the only available natural colloid, may have beneficial effects. The last decade has seen growing interest in the potential harms related to fluid overloading. In the perioperative setting, appropriate fluid management that maintains adequate organ perfusion while limiting fluid administration should represent the standard of care. Protocols including a restrictive continuous fluid administration alongside bolus administration to achieve hemodynamic targets have been proposed. A similar approach should be considered also for critically ill patients, in whom increased endothelial permeability makes this strategy more relevant. Active de-escalation protocols may be necessary in a later phase. The R.O.S.E. conceptual model (Resuscitation, Optimization, Stabilization, Evacuation) summarizes accurately a dynamic approach to fluid therapy, maximizing benefits and minimizing harms. Even in specific categories of critically ill patients, i.e., with trauma or burns, fluid therapy should be carefully applied, considering the importance of their specific aims; maintaining peripheral oxygen delivery, while avoiding the consequences of fluid overload.Entities:
Keywords: Acid base; Chloride; Crystalloids; Fluid therapy; Goal-directed; Intensive care units; Maintenance; Resuscitation; Sodium; Water–electrolyte balance
Year: 2020 PMID: 32449147 PMCID: PMC7245999 DOI: 10.1186/s13613-020-00679-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intensive Care ISSN: 2110-5820 Impact factor: 6.925
Analogy between the 4 Ds of antibiotic and fluid therapy Stewardship.
Adapted from Malbrain M.L.N.G. et al. [4] with permission
| Description | Antibiotics | Fluids | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Drug | Inappropriate therapy | More organ failure, longer ICU/hospital length of stay, longer duration mechanical ventilation (MV) | Hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, more acute kidney injury, more need for renal replacement therapy, increased mortality |
| Appropriate therapy | Key factor in empiric AB choice is consideration of patient risk factors (prior AB use, duration of mechanical ventilation, corticosteroids, recent hospitalization, residence in nursing home, etc.) | Key factor in empiric fluid therapy is consideration of patient risk factors (fluid balance, fluid overload, capillary leak, source control, kidney function, organ function). Do not use glucose as a resuscitation fluid | |
| Combination therapy | Possible benefits: broader spectrum, synergy, avoidance of emergency of resistance, less toxicity | Possible benefits: specific fluids for different indications (replacement vs maintenance vs resuscitation), less toxicity | |
| Appropriate timing | Survival decreases with 7% per hour delay. Needs discipline and practical organization | In refractory shock early goal-directed therapy (EGDT) has proven beneficial. The longer the delay, the more microcirculatory hypoperfusion | |
| Dosing | Pharmacokinetics | Depends on distribution volume, clearance (kidney and liver function), albumin level, tissue penetration | Depends on type of fluid: glucose remains 10% intravascular, crystalloids 25%, vs colloids 100% after 1 h, and other factors (distribution volume, osmolality, oncoticity, kidney function) |
| Pharmacodynamics | Reflected by the minimal inhibitory concentration. Reflected by “kill” characteristics, time ( | Depends on type of fluid and where you want them to go: intravascular (resuscitation), interstitial vs intracellular (cellular dehydration) | |
| Toxicity | Some ABs are toxic for kidneys, advice on dose adjustment needed. However, not getting infection under control is not helping the kidneys either | Some fluids (HES—starches) are toxic for the kidneys. However, not getting shock under control is not helping the kidneys either | |
| Duration | Appropriate duration | No strong evidence but trend toward shorter duration. Do not use ABs to treat fever, CRP, infiltrates, but use ABs to treat infections | No strong evidence but trend toward shorter duration. Do not use fluids to treat low central venous or mean arterial pressure, urine output, but use fluids to treat hypovolemia |
| Treat to response | Stop ABs when signs and symptoms of active infection resolve. Future role for biomarkers (PCT) | Fluids can be stopped when shock is resolved (normal lactate). Future role for biomarkers (NGAL, cystatin C, citrullin, L-FABP) | |
| De-escalation | Monitoring | Take cultures first and have the guts to change a winning team | After stabilization with early adequate fluid management (normal PPV, normal cardiac output, normal lactate), stop ongoing resuscitation and move to conservative late fluid management and late goal-directed fluid removal (= deresuscitation) |
AB antibiotic, Cmax maximal peak concentration, CRP C reactive protein, EGDT early goal-directed therapy, HES hydroxyl-ethyl starch, L-FABP L-type fatty acid-binding protein, MIC mean inhibitory concentration, MV mechanical ventilation, NGAL neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, PCT procalcitonin, PPV pulse pressure variation
Electrolyte composition of the main balanced solutions available for intravenous administration.
Adapted from Langer et al. [21] with permission
| Crystalloids | Gelatins | Starches | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lactated Ringer’s | Acetated Ringer’s | Hartmann’s | PlasmaLyte | Sterofundin ISOa | ELO-MEL isoton | Isoplex | Gelaspan | Hextend | Tetraspan | |
| Na+ [mEq/L] | 130 | 132 | 131 | 140 | 145 | 140 | 145 | 151 | 143 | 140 |
| K+ [mEq/L] | 4 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 4 | 4 | 3 | 4 |
| Ca2+ [mEq/L] | 3 | 3 | 4 | – | 5 | 5 | – | 2 | 5 | 5 |
| Mg2+ [mEq/L] | – | – | 3 | 3 | 2 | 3 | 1.8 | 2 | 0.9 | 2 |
| Cl− [mEq/L] | 109 | 110 | 111 | 98 | 127 | 108 | 105 | 103 | 124 | 118 |
| Lactate [mEq/L] | 28 | – | 29 | – | – | – | 25 | – | 28 | – |
| Acetate [mEq/L] | – | 29 | – | 27 | 24 | 45 | – | 24 | – | 24 |
| Malate [mEq/L] | – | – | – | – | 5 | – | – | – | – | 5 |
| Gluconate [mEq/L] | – | – | – | 23 | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Dextrose [g L-1] | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Gelatin [g/L] | – | – | – | – | – | – | 40 | 40 | – | – |
| HES [g/L] | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | 60 | 60 |
| Dextran [g/L] | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| In-vivo SID [mEq/L] | 28 | 29 | 29 | 50 | 29 | 45 | 45.8 | 56 | 28 | 29b |
| Osmolarity [mOsm/L] | 278 | 277 | 279 | 294 | 309 | 302 | 284 | 284 | 307 | 297 |
In-vivo SID—all organic molecules contained in balanced solutions are strong anions. The resulting calculated SID (in vitro-SID) is equal to 0 mEq/L, due to electrical neutrality. Once infused, the organic molecules are metabolized to CO2 and water; the resulting in vivo-SID corresponds to the amount of organic anions metabolized
aSterofundin-ISO or Ringerfundin
bIn vivo-SID of Tetraspan reported in the Table results from the sum of organic anions; of note, there is a discrepancy as compared to the SID calculated as the difference between inorganic cations and inorganic anions (29 mEq/L vs. 33 mEq/L). No clear explanation has been reported from the seller
Fig. 1The R.O.S.E. concept and the 4 phases of Fluid Therapy. Adapted according to the Open Access CC BY Licence 4.0 with permission from Malbrain et al. [9]. a Graph showing the four-hit model of shock with evolution of patients’ cumulative fluid volume status over time during the five distinct phases of resuscitation: Resuscitation (R), Optimization (O), Stabilization (S), and Evacuation (E) (ROSE), followed by a possible risk of Hypoperfusion in case of too aggressive deresuscitation. On admission patients are hypovolemic, followed by normovolemia after fluid resuscitation (EAFM, early adequate fluid management), and possible fluid overload, again followed by a phase going to normovolemia with late conservative fluid management (LCFM) and late goal-directed fluid removal (LGFR) or deresuscitation. In case of hypovolemia, O2 cannot get into the tissues because of convective problems, in case of hypervolemia O2 cannot get into the tissue because of diffuse problems related to interstitial and pulmonary edema, gut edema (ileus and abdominal hypertension). b The role of fluids within the R.O.S.E. concept
The 4 dynamic phases of fluid therapy according to the ROSE concept.
Adapted from Malbrain et al. [4] with permission
| Resuscitation (R) | Optimization (O) | Stabilization (S) | Evacuation (E) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HIT | First | Second | Second | Third | Fourth |
| Cause | Inflammatory insult, e.g., sepsis, severe acute pancreatitis (SAP), burns, trauma, etc. | Ischemia and reperfusion | Ischemia and reperfusion | GIPS (global increased permeability syndrome) | Hypoperfusion |
| Phase | Ebb | Flow | Flow/no flow | No flow | No flow |
| Type | Severe shock | Unstable | Stable | Recovering | Unstable |
| Example | Septic shock, major trauma, hemorrhagic shock, ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, severe acute pancreatitis, severe burns (> 25% TBSA) | Intra- and perioperative goal-directed therapy, less severe burns (< 25% TBSA), diabetic keto-acidosis, severe gastro-intestinal losses (vomiting, gastroenteritis) | Postoperative patient (nil per mouth or combination of total enteral plus parenteral nutrition), abdominal vacuum-assisted closure, replacement of losses in less-severe pancreatitis | Patient on full enteral feed in recovery phase of critical illness, polyuric phase after recovering from acute tubular necrosis | Patient with cirrhosis and anasarca edema (GIPS) and no Flow state, hepatosplanchnic hypoperfusion |
| Question | When to start fluids? | When to stop fluids? | When to stop fluids? | When to start unloading? | When to stop unloading? |
| Subquestion | Benefits of fluids? | Risks of fluids? | Risks of fluids? | Benefits of unloading? | Risks of unloading? |
| O2 transport | Convective problems | Euvolemia, normal diffusion | Diffusion problems | Euvolemia, normal diffusion | Convective problems |
| Fluids | Mandatory | Biomarker of critical illness | Biomarker of critical illness | Toxic | |
| Fluid therapy | Rapid bolus (4 ml/kg/10–15 min) | Titrate maintenance fluids, conservative use of fluid bolus | Minimal maintenance if oral intake inadequate, provide replacement fluids | Oral intake if possible Avoid unnecessary IV fluids | Avoid hypoperfusion |
| Fluid balance | Positive | Neutral | Neutral/negative | Negative | Neutral |
| Result | Life saving (rescue, salvage) | Organ rescue (maintenance) | Organ support (homeostasis) | Organ recovery (removal) | Organ support |
| Targets | Macrohemodynamics (MAP, CO); lactate; volumetric preload (LVEDAI); functional hemodynamics; fluid responsiveness (PLR, EEO) | Organ macroperfusion (MAP, APP, CO, ScvO2); volumetric preload (GEDVI, RVEDVI); GEF correction; R/L shunt; think of polycompartment syndrome, CARS | Organ function (EVLWI, PVPI, IAP, APP); biomarkers (NGAL, cystatin-C, citrullin); capillary leak markers (colloid oncotic pressure, osmolality, CLI, RLI); daily and cumulative FB, body weight | Organ function evolution (P/F ratio, EVLWI, IAP, APP, PVPI) Body composition (ECW, ICW, TBW, VE) | Organ microperfusion (pHi, ScvO2, lactate, ICG-PDR); Biomarkers; Negative cumulative fluid balance |
| Monitoring tools | Arterial-line, central venous-line, PPV or SVV (manual or via monitor), uncalibrated CO, TTE, TEE | Calibrated CO (TPTD, PAC) | Calibrated CO (TPTD); Balance; BIA (ECW, ICW, TBW, VE) | Calibrated CO (TPTD); balance; BIA; DE-escalation | LiMON, Gastric tonometry, micro-dialysis |
| Goals | Correct shock (EAFM—early adequate fluid management) | Maintain tissue perfusion | Aim for zero or negative fluid balance (LCFM—late conservative fluid management) | Mobilize fluid accumulation (LGFR—late goal-directed fluid removal = emptying) or DE-resuscitation | Maintain tissue perfusion |
| Timeframe | Minutes | Hours | Days | Days to weeks | Weeks |
APP abdominal perfusion pressure, = MAP − IAP, BIA bio-electrical impedance analysis, CARS cardio-abdominal renal syndrome, CLI capillary leak index, = serum CRP divided by serum albumin, CO cardiac output, ECW extracellular water, EEO end-expiratory occlusion test, EVLWI extravascular lung water index, GEDVI global end-diastolic volume index, GEF global ejection fraction, GIPS global increased permeability syndrome, IAP intra-abdominal pressure, ICG-PDR indocyaninegreen plasma disappearance rate, ICW intracellular water, IV intravenous, LVEDAI left ventricular end-diastolic area index, MAP mean arterial pressure, P/F pO2 over FiO2 ratio, PLRT passive leg raising, PPV pulse pressure variation, PVPI pulmonary vascular permeability index, RLI renal leak index, = urine albumin divide by urine creatinine, R/L right to left shunt, RVEDVI right ventricular enddiastolic volume index, SAP severe acute pancreatitis, ScvO central venous oxygen saturation, SVV stroke volume variation, TBSA total burned surface area, TBW total body water, TEE transesophageal echocardiography, TPTD transpulmonary thermodilution, TTE transthoracic echocardiograph, VE volume excess
Fig. 2The TROL mnemonic of fluid challenge: considerations for administration of a fluid bolus in critically ill patients. CO cardiac output; CVP central venous pressure; EVLWI extra vascular lung water index; PVPI pulmonary vascular permeability index
(Adapted from Vincent and Weil [97])
Recommendations regarding fluid resuscitation in severe burns’ patients.
Adapted from Peeters et al. [106] with permission
| Type of fluid | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| 1. Normal saline | Given the fact that fluid resuscitation in burn management requires large volumes, the use of saline cannot be recommended in a burn resuscitation protocol |
| 2. Balanced crystalloid | Based on the available evidence, balanced crystalloid solutions are a pragmatic initial resuscitation fluid in the majority of acutely ill (and burn) patients |
| 3. Semi-synthetic colloids | Given the recent data concerning the use of semi-synthetic colloids (and starches in particular), their use in critically ill patients, including burn patients, cannot be recommended |
| 4. Albumin | Based on the available evidence the use of albumin 20% can be recommended in severe burns, especially in the deresuscitation phase guided by indices of capillary leak, body weight, (cumulative) fluid balance, fluid overload, extravascular lung water and IAP |
| 5. Hypertonic solutions | To this day, there is insufficient evidence to reach consensus regarding the safety of hypertonic saline in burn resuscitation. Whenever using hypertonic saline in clinical practice, however, close monitoring of sodium levels is highly advised |
Fig. 3The 5 Ps of fluid administration. a Physician: All starts with the physician’s participation in making decisions related to fluid management. b Prescription: The physician should engage in writing a prescription that accounts for drug, dose, duration and whenever possible de-escalation. c Pharmacy: The prescription is sent to the pharmacy and is checked for inconsistencies by the pharmacist to get a more holistic view. d Preparation: The process by which the prescription is prepared and additions (e.g., electrolytes) made. e Patient: The filled prescription goes back to the patient and fluid stewards should observe administration, response, and debrief
The four stages to check for appropriateness of IV fluid therapy.
Adapted with permission from Malbrain ML et al. [126]
| Stage of evaluation | Audit standard |
|---|---|
| 1. Assessment | The patient’s fluid balance (via fluid chart with input and output) is assessed on admission in the hospital and on a day-by-day basis The patient’s weight is assessed within the last 3 days of fluid prescription The patient’s fluid and electrolyte needs are assessed as part of every ward review The assessment of the patient’s fluid status (hypo/eu/hypervolemia) includes the use of clinical judgement, vital signs and fluid balance with urine output Recent lab results with urea and electrolytes (within 24 h of fluid prescription) If possible sodium balance should be reported |
| 2. Indication | A. Resuscitation For patients in need of fluid resuscitation: The cause of the fluid deficit is identified An assessment of shock or hypoperfusion was made A fluid bolus of 4 mL/kg of balanced crystalloids is given Fluid responsiveness is assessed with functional hemodynamics, passive leg raising test or end-expiratory occlusion test, or a combination Mean arterial pressure and cardiac output are monitored continuously via pulse contour analysis allowing assessment of beat-to-beat variations Patients who have received initial fluid resuscitation are reassessed within 30 min Care is upgraded in patients who have already been given > 2000 mL of crystalloids and still need fluid resuscitation after reassessment Patients who have not had > 2000 mL of crystalloids and who still need fluid resuscitation after reassessment receive 2–4 mL/kg of crystalloids and have a further reassessment |
B. Maintenance If patients need IV fluids for routine maintenance alone, the initial prescription is restricted to 25–30 mL/kg/day (1 mL/kg/h) of water and Approximately 1 mmol/kg/day of potassium (K+) and Approximately 1–1.5 mmol/kg/day of sodium (Na+) and Approximately 1 mmol/kg/day of chloride and Approximately 50–100 g/day (1–1.5 g/kg/day) of glucose to limit starvation ketosis Definition of inappropriateness in case of electrolyte disturbances Solutions not containing adequate amount of sodium in case of hyponatremia (Na < 135 mmol/L) Solutions not containing adequate amount of potassium in case of hypokalemia (K < 3.5 mmol/L) Solutions containing too much sodium in case of hypernatremia (Na > 145 mmol/L) Solutions containing too much potassium in case of hypokalemia (K > 5 mmol/L) The amount of fluid intake via other sources should be subtracted from the basic maintenance need of 1 ml/kg/h: Enteral or parenteral nutrition Fluid creep (see further) | |
C. Replacement and redistribution If patients have ongoing abnormal losses or a complex redistribution problem, the fluid therapy is adjusted for all other sources of fluid and electrolyte losses (e.g., normal saline may be indicated in patients with metabolic alkalosis due to gastro-intestinal losses) | |
D. Fluid creep All sources of fluids administered need to be detailed: crystalloids, colloids, blood products, enteral and parenteral nutritional products, and oral intake (water, tea, soup, etc.) Precise data on the concentrated electrolytes added to these fluids or administered separately need to be collected Fluid creep is defined as the sum of the volumes of these electrolytes, the small volumes to keep venous lines open (saline or glucose 5%), and the total volume used as a vehicle for medication | |
| 3. Prescription | The following information is included in the IV fluid prescription: The type of fluid The rate of fluid infusion The volume or dose of fluid The IV fluid prescription is adapted to current electrolyte disorders and other sources of fluid intake |
| 4. Management | Patients have an IV fluid management plan, including a fluid and electrolyte prescription over the next 24 h The prescription for a maintenance IV fluid only changes after a clinical exam, a change in dietary intake or evaluation of laboratory results |