AI Article Synopsis

  • In septic shock patients, the use of intravenous fluids during initial treatment poses challenges, raising questions about the type, dose, and timing of these fluids.
  • The review discusses various fluid management strategies, including early goal-directed fluid management and later conservative approaches, categorized through the concept of the "four D's": drug, dosing, duration, and de-escalation.
  • Fluid therapy is divided into four phases—resuscitation, optimization, stabilization, and evacuation—with key questions focusing on the initiation, cessation, and management of intravenous fluids during treatment.

Article Abstract

In patients with septic shock, the administration of fluids during initial hemodynamic resuscitation remains a major therapeutic challenge. We are faced with many open questions regarding the type, dose and timing of intravenous fluid administration. There are only four major indications for intravenous fluid administration: aside from resuscitation, intravenous fluids have many other uses including maintenance and replacement of total body water and electrolytes, as carriers for medications and for parenteral nutrition. In this paradigm-shifting review, we discuss different fluid management strategies including early adequate goal-directed fluid management, late conservative fluid management and late goal-directed fluid removal. In addition, we expand on the concept of the "four D's" of fluid therapy, namely drug, dosing, duration and de-escalation. During the treatment of patients with septic shock, four phases of fluid therapy should be considered in order to provide answers to four basic questions. These four phases are the resuscitation phase, the optimization phase, the stabilization phase and the evacuation phase. The four questions are "When to start intravenous fluids?", "When to stop intravenous fluids?", "When to start de-resuscitation or active fluid removal?" and finally "When to stop de-resuscitation?" In analogy to the way we handle antibiotics in critically ill patients, it is time for fluid stewardship.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5964054PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13613-018-0402-xDOI Listing

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