Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2904105 | Chest | 2008 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Fluid infusion may be lifesaving in patients with severe sepsis, especially in the earliest phases of treatment. Following initial resuscitation, however, fluid boluses often fail to augment perfusion and may be harmful. In this review, we seek to compare and contrast the impact of fluids in early and later sepsis; show that much fluid therapy is clinically ineffective in patients with severe sepsis; explore the detrimental aspects of excessive volume infusion; examine how clinicians assess the intravascular volume state; appraise the potential for dynamic indexes to predict fluid responsiveness; and recommend a clinical approach.
Keywords
PACLVEDAScvO2PAOPEGDTTEECVPPEEPPRAPLRSvO2SPVPPVTransesophageal echocardiographyPassive leg raisingPulse pressure variationsystolic pressure variationGlobal end-diastolic volumeSepsisright ventricular end-diastolic volume indexpulmonary artery occlusion pressureCentral venous pressuremean arterial pressurePositive end-expiratory pressureRight Atrial PressureRVEDVIFluidsleft ventricular end-diastolic areamapearly goal-directed therapyfluid responsivenesspulmonary artery catheter
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Authors
Lakshmi MD, Gregory A. MD, FCCP,