Optimization of preload in severe sepsis and septic shock

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Abstract

In sepsis both under- and overresuscitation are associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Moreover, sepsis can be complicated by myocardial dysfunction, and only half of the critically ill patients exhibit preload responsiveness. It is of paramount importance to accurately, safely, and rapidly determine and optimize preload during resuscitation. Traditional methods of determining preload based on measurement of pressure in a heart chamber or volume of a heart chamber (static parameters) are inaccurate and should be abandoned in favor of determining preload responsiveness by using one of the dynamic parameters based on respiratory variation in the venous or arterial circulation or based on change in stroke volume in response to an endogenous or exogenous volume challenge. The recent development and validation of a number of noninvasive technologies now allow us to optimize preload in an accurate, safe, rapid and, cost-effective manner. © 2012 Adil Shujaat and Abubakr A. Bajwa.

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Shujaat, A., & Bajwa, A. A. (2012). Optimization of preload in severe sepsis and septic shock. Critical Care Research and Practice. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/761051

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