| Literature DB >> 34188992 |
Mohammed G Elhassan1, Peter W Chao1, Argenis Curiel1.
Abstract
Assessment of patients' volume status at the bedside is a very important clinical skill that physicians need in many clinical scenarios. Hypovolemia with hypotension and tissue under-perfusion are usually more alarming to physicians, but hypervolemia is also associated with poor outcomes, making euvolemia a crucial goal in clinical practice. Nevertheless, the assessment of volume status can be challenging, especially in the absence of a gold standard test that is reliable and easily accessible to assist with clinical decision-making. Physicians need to have a broad knowledge of the individual non-invasive clinical tools available for them at the bedside to evaluate volume status. In this review, we will discuss the strengths and limitations of the traditional tools, which include careful history taking, physical examination, and basic laboratory tests, and also include the relatively new tool of point-of-care ultrasound.Entities:
Keywords: bedside ultrasound; euvolemia; hypervolemia; hypovolemia; physical examination; point-of-care ultrasound; volume status assessment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34188992 PMCID: PMC8231469 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.15253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Non-invasive clinical instruments to assess volume status (summary of findings)
POCUS, point-of-care ultrasound
| Clinical Instruments | Comments |
| History and data gathering from the patient (primary source), or families, nurses, or electronic records (secondary source) | Presenting symptom(s), especially symptoms suggestive of volume loss (e.g., diarrhea, vomiting, bleeding, etc.) |
| History of weight gain | |
| Past medical history (e.g., cardiac disease or history of heart failure) | |
| Cumulative fluid balance (care needs to be exercised to assure accuracy of data) | |
| Daily weights (can be helpful in patients with hypervolemia due to cardiac, renal, or liver disease) | |
| Urine output (oliguric kidney injury can be found in both hypovolemia and hypervolemia due to poor cardiac output) | |
| Physical examination | Vital signs including postural blood pressure and pulse measurements (hypotension can be associated with both hypo- and hypervolemia due to cardiac dysfunction; interpret postural hypotension cautiously in the elderly; severe postural dizziness and postural increase of heart rate by 30 beats per minute can be useful indicators of hypovolemia; patients with renal disease are prone to both hypo- and hypervolemia) |
| Examination of skin and mucous membranes (more reliable in children compared to the elderly; moist mucous membranes and axillae make dehydration less likely but do not rule it out; skin mottling is non-specific but can be associated with increased mortality in septic shock) | |
| Testing for capillary refill (might be useful only in severe hypovolemia) | |
| Neck examination for jugular venous distention (its presence can be useful to diagnose hypervolemia in heart failure patients, but its absence does not help make it less likely) | |
| Precordial auscultation for third heart sound (its presence can be useful to diagnose hypervolemia in heart failure patients, but its absence does not make it less likely; left lateral decubitus positioning might increase detection rate) | |
| Lung auscultation for basal crackles (non-specific; its presence only mildly increases the probability of heart failure in patients with dyspnea and its absence does not make it less likely) | |
| Lower extremity examination for edema (does not always indicate hypervolemia and it can absent in many patients with heart failure) | |
| POCUS | Lung examination for congestion (presence of bilateral B-lines helps diagnose pulmonary edema and their numbers might correlate with degree of congestion; can be found in other interstitial processes) |
| Inferior vena cava diameter and collapsibility (correlates with volume status more than physical examination; relatively easy to interpret by novice learners) | |
| Internal jugular vein distension (upper limit might be easier to see compared to physical examination; correlates with jugular venous pressure but might underestimate central venous pressure) | |
| Cardiac POCUS for left ventricular contractility using eyeball method (hypercontractility can be found in hypovolemia, and reduced contractility is found in patients with hypervolemia due to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction) | |
| Cardiac POCUS to estimate cardiac output (needs training and not easily feasible) | |
| Common laboratory tests | Tests that can be associated with both hypo- and hypervolemia (serum sodium and osmolality changes; serum lactate elevation; serum blood urea nitrogen elevation) |
| Serum uric acid (levels can be elevated in hemoconcentration associated with dehydration; levels below 4 mg/dL can be seen in euvolemic syndrome of inappropriate anti-diuresis) | |
| Urine studies (increased urine-specific gravity can be associated with dehydration but correlation is not always consistent) | |
| Natriuretic peptides (associated with hypervolemia; level below 100 pg/mL is highly reliable to exclude heart failure in patients with acute dyspnea) | |
| Bioimpedance analysis | Not widely used or available |
Video 1Point-of-care cardiac ultrasound (long axis left parasternal view) showing reduced left ventricular contractility
Video 6Point-of-care ultrasound of the left lung base posteriorly showing small pleural effusion