AI Article Synopsis

  • Intravenous fluid therapy is often used in emergency departments to help patients, but it's tricky to know how much fluid to give.
  • Doctors typically use things like blood pressure and heart rate to guess how the patient's body is responding, but these methods aren't always accurate.
  • New techniques are being developed to better monitor how patients respond to fluids, using noninvasive tools that could give doctors a clearer picture of what the patient needs.

Article Abstract

Intravenous fluid therapy is commonly administered in the emergency department (ED). Despite the deleterious potential of over- and under-resuscitation, professional society guidelines continue to recommend administering a fixed volume of fluid in initial resuscitation. Predicting whether a specific patient will respond to fluid therapy remains one of the most important, but challenging questions that ED clinicians face in clinical practice. Surrogate parameters (i.e. blood pressure and heart rate), are widely used in usual care to estimate changes in stroke volume (SV). Due to their inadequacy in estimating SV, noninvasive techniques (e.g. bioreactance, echocardiography, noninvasive finger cuff technology), have been proposed as a more accurate and readily deployable method for assessing flow and preload responsiveness. Dynamic monitoring systems based on cardiac preload challenge and assessment of SV, by using noninvasive and continuous methods, provide more accurate, feasible, efficient, and reasonably accurate strategy for prediction of fluid responsiveness than static measurements. In this article, we aimed to analyze the different methods currently available for dynamic monitoring of preload responsiveness.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11232941PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MEJ.0000000000001103DOI Listing

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