| Literature DB >> 33169217 |
Philippe Vignon1,2,3,4, Bruno Evrard5,6,7, Pierre Asfar8, Mattia Busana9, Carolyn S Calfee10, Silvia Coppola11,12,13, Julien Demiselle8, Guillaume Geri14,15,16, Mathieu Jozwiak17,18, Greg S Martin19, Luciano Gattinoni9, Davide Chiumello11,12,13.
Abstract
Modalities of fluid management in patients sustaining the acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are challenging and controversial. Optimal fluid management should provide adequate oxygen delivery to the body, while avoiding inadvertent increase in lung edema which further impairs gas exchange. In ARDS patients, positive fluid balance has been associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation, longer ICU and hospital stay, and higher mortality. Accordingly, a restrictive strategy has been compared to a more liberal approach in randomized controlled trials conducted in various clinical settings. Restrictive strategies included fluid restriction guided by the monitoring of extravascular lung water, pulmonary capillary wedge or central venous pressure, and furosemide targeted to diuresis and/or albumin replacement in hypoproteinemic patients. Overall, restrictive strategies improved oxygenation significantly and reduced duration of mechanical ventilation, but had no significant effect on mortality. Fluid management may require different approaches depending on the time course of ARDS (i.e., early vs. late period). The effects of fluid strategy management according to ARDS phenotypes remain to be evaluated. Since ARDS is frequently associated with sepsis-induced acute circulatory failure, the prediction of fluid responsiveness is crucial in these patients to avoid hemodynamically inefficient-hence respiratory detrimental-fluid administration. Specific hemodynamic indices of fluid responsiveness or mini-fluid challenges should be preferably used. Since the positive airway pressure contributes to positive fluid balance in ventilated ARDS patients, it should be kept as low as possible. As soon as the hemodynamic status is stabilized, correction of cumulated fluid retention may rely on diuretics administration or renal replacement therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Acute respiratory distress syndrome; Fluid therapies; Prognosis; Pulmonary edema; Water–electrolyte balance
Year: 2020 PMID: 33169217 PMCID: PMC7652045 DOI: 10.1007/s00134-020-06310-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intensive Care Med ISSN: 0342-4642 Impact factor: 17.440
Fig. 1Schematic representation of summarized effects of positive-pressure ventilation on fluid balance and of the potential benefit–risk ratio of fluid administration in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome. HO water, Na sodium, Paw airway pressure, Ppl pleural pressure
Studies assessing the effects of fluid management (restrictive vs. liberal) on blood oxygenation, duration of mechanical ventilation, length of ICU stay, and mortality in adult patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome
| Authors, year | Study aim | Number of patients | Study design | Oxygenation | Duration of mechanical ventilation | Ventilator free days | Length of ICU stay | Mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mitchell et al. (1992) [ | To evaluate a fluid restriction strategy according to EVLW or PCWP | 101 | RCT | Similar | Significantly lower in the PCWP group | – | Similar | No statistical difference on ICU and hospital mortality |
| Widerman et al. (2006) | To evaluate a fluid restriction strategy according to CVP or PCWP | 1001 | RCT | Significantly higher in conservative group | – | Significantly higher in conservative group | Higher number of ICU-free days in conservative group | No statistical difference on 60-day mortality |
| Stewart et al. (2009) [ | To evaluate a fluid restriction strategy according to CVP or PCWP in surgical patients | 244 | Post-hoc analysis | – | – | Significantly higher in conservative strategy | Higher number of ICU-free days in conservative group | No statistical difference on 60-day mortality |
| Martin et al. (2002) [ | To evaluate the effects of albumin replacement and furosemide targeted to diuresis, weight loss and serum total protein in hypoproteinemic patients | 37 | RCT | Significantly higher in the albumin group | – | – | – | No statistical difference on ICU and 30-day mortality |
| Martin et al. (2005) [ | To evaluate the effects of albumin replacement and furosemide or albumin replacement alone titrated to fluid loss and serum total protein in hypoproteinemic patients | 40 | RCT | Significantly higher in the albumin group | Significantly lower in the albumin group | Significantly higher in the albumin group | Similar | No statistical difference on ICU and 30-day mortality |
RCT randomized controlled trial, EVLW extravascular lung water, PCWP pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, CVP central venous pressure
aSubgroup analysis of the study by Wiederman et al.
Fig. 2Summary of hemodynamic parameters available to predict fluid responsiveness in ventilated patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome. The color code reflects the advantages (green) and drawbacks (red) of each test, with the orange color for neutrality. ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, CCE critical care echocardiography, CO cardiac output, IVC inferior vena cava, RV right ventricle, SVC superior vena cava, TEE transesophageal echocardiography, TPTD transpulmonary thermodilution. *End-expiratory occlusion with TPTD or combined end-expiratory and end-inspiratory occlusions with CCE
Fig. 3Proposed diagnostic algorithm in ventilated ARDS patients presenting with shock based on a hemodynamic assessment using critical care echocardiography during the resuscitation and optimization periods [24]. Fluid responsiveness should be assessed to avoid hemodynamically inefficient and potentially respiratory detrimental fluids administration. In patients with sinus rhythm, pulse pressure variation can be used as a warning sign for identifying the mechanism of left ventricular load dependency revealed by heart–lung interactions (i.e., right ventricular failure vs hypovolemia responsible for Δ-down; rarely severe left ventricular failure responsible for Δ-up). In patients with other cardiac rhythms, respiratory variations of the superior vena cava diameter are the most specific parameter to predict fluid responsiveness which requires transesophageal echocardiography. Alternatively, a passive leg raising may be used to assess fluid responsiveness. When values of hemodynamic indices are within the “grey zone” or in the presence of increased intra-abdominal pressure (risk of false-negative result), mini-fluid challenges may be considered. 1The diagnostic workup must include the precise clinical setting, ongoing therapy, clinical hemodynamic assessment and biological markers of tissue hypoperfusion. In ARDS patients, specific parameters of fluid responsiveness should be preferred.2When pulse pressure variation is in the “grey zone”, a passive leg raising may be performed to seek for fluid responsiveness. 3Right ventricular failure typically associates an acute dilatation of the right ventricular cavity and increased central venous pressure secondary to systemic venous congestion [36]. 4In ARDS patients, a ΔSVC cut-off of 31% predicts fluid responsiveness with a 90% specificity, at the expense of a low sensitivity of 43% [42]. Associated echocardiography findings consistent with decreased cardiac preload are frequently associated (e.g., hyperkinetic right ventricle with small cavity size, decreased diameter of the inferior vena cava with marked respiratory variation, significant respiratory variation of maximal left ventricular outflow tract Doppler velocity [41]. 5Repeated small aliquots (e.g., 250 mL) are preferable; both efficacy (percentage of increase of left ventricular stroke volume when compared to baseline) and tolerance (absence of significant increase in left ventricular filling pressure) of fluid challenge should be assessed using serial hemodynamic assessment. 6To increase the sensitivity of superior vena cava respiratory variation, lower threshold value can be used (e.g. a 4% cut-off has a sensitivity of 89%) [42], or a mini-fluid challenge can be considered. 7: mini-fluid challenges consist in administrating intravenously a small volume of fluids over a very short period of time (e.g., 50–100 mL within 1 min) [46–48]. 8Intra-abdominal pressure should best be measured in patients at high risk of intra- abdominal hypertension [44] since elevated values may result in falsely negative passive leg raising [37]. ARDS acute respiratory distress syndrome, ΔSVC respiratory variation of the superior vena cava diameter, IAP intra-abdominal pressure, PPV pulse pressure variation, RV right ventricle
Fig. 4Proposed practical management of fluid balance according to the cause and timing of ARDS according to the four-hit theory/ROSE concept [24]. CVP central venous pressure, PAC pulmonary artery catheter, CCE critical care echocardiography, ScVO central venous oxygen saturation, P[v-a]CO veno-arterial carbon dioxide tension difference, TPTD transpulmonary thermodilution
| Optimal fluid management in patients with the acute respiratory distress syndrome remains challenging and controversial because it should provide adequate oxygen delivery to the body while avoiding inadvertent increase in lung edema. We discuss the restrictive versus liberal strategy of fluid administration and describe the management of fluid balance in these patients with frequently associated acute circulatory failure. |