Surgical patients develop a fluid deficit during pre-operative starvation. This study examines the effects of pre-operative fluid administration on haemodynamic variables, oxygenation and splanchnic perfusion in patients undergoing elective coronary artery bypass grafting. Forty-eight patients were randomised to receive either a pre-operative crystalloid infusion (crystalloid group, n = 24) or no infusion (control group, n = 24). Patients in the crystalloid group received a continuous infusion of Ringer's solution at 1.5 ml.kg(-1).h(-1) from 22:00 h until induction of anaesthesia the next morning. Immediately before induction of anaesthesia, all patients were given a colloid infusion to increase pulmonary capillary wedge pressure and central venous pressure to similar levels in both groups. Haemodynamic and oxygenation parameters were measured using invasive cardiovascular monitoring, and splanchnic perfusion was assessed by indocyanine green clearance. Patients in the crystalloid group received a mean (SD) of 1008 (140) ml of Ringer's solution overnight. Patients in the crystalloid group had a higher splanchnic blood flow than the control group before induction of anaesthesia [mean (SD) = 1782 (573) ml.min(-1) vs. 1391 (333) ml.min(-1), p < 0.05]. There were no significant differences in systemic haemodynamic data and global oxygenation parameters between the two groups. Pre-operative infusion of crystalloid appears to result in an improvement in pre-operative splanchnic perfusion.

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