Abstract
Fluid challenges are considered the cornerstone of resuscitation in critically ill patients. However, clinical studies have demonstrated that only about 50% of hemodynamically unstable patients are volume responsive. Furthermore, increasing evidence suggests that excess fluid resuscitation is associated with increased mortality. It therefore becomes vital to assess a patient's fluid responsiveness prior to embarking on fluid loading. Static pressure (CVP, PAOP) and echocardiographic (IVC diameter, LVEDA) parameters fails to predict volume responsiveness. However, a number of dynamic echocardiographic parameters which are based on changes in vena-caval dimensions or cardiac function induce by positive pressure ventilation or passive leg raising appear to be highly predictive of volume responsiveness. © 2012 Alexander Levitov and Paul E. Marik.
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CITATION STYLE
Levitov, A., & Marik, P. E. (2012). Echocardiographic assessment of preload responsiveness in critically Ill patients. Cardiology Research and Practice. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/819696
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