IV Fluids: Volume, Electrolytes and Maintenance Therapy Flashcards
Volume Deficit-Clinical Types
- What is Total Body loss?
- Examples? 2 - Extracellular? 3
- Intravascular? 1
Total body water
- Water loss
- diabetes insipidus
- osmotic diarrhea - Extracellular
- Salt and water loss
- GI tract losses
- Third spacing - Intravascular
- Acute hemorrhage
Extracellular: What are examples of salt and water loss? 3
Extracellular: GI losses? 3
- secretory diarrhea
- ascites
- edema
- V/D,
- NG Sx,
- enteric fistulas
- What is “Third Space” (not intra- or extra-) loss?
- Causes? 6
- This situation is not normal and the fluid is derived from ___________ fluid……will always need IV fluids to prevent__________ volume depletion.
- Acute sequestration in a body compartment that is not in equilibrium with ECF (isotonic)
- Causes
- Intestinal obstruction
- Severe pancreatitis
- Peritonitis
- Major venous obstruction
- Capillary leak syndrome
- Burns - extracellular, extracellular
Not interstitial and not intravascular…non-contributory space
Extracellular space volume loss
1. Describe the timeline of loss compared to intracellular?
- Use your clinical parameters to judge degree of volume loss such as? 6
- Loss occurs more rapidly than from the intracellular space
- Weight loss,
- BP,
- JVP,
- urine sodium concentration,
- urine output,
- HCT
Increased states of fluid loss
6
- Fever
- Burns
- Sepsis
- Gastric fistulas
- Surgical drains (may or may not have high output)
- Or other states of increased metabolic activity
Signs of extracellular fluid depletion
Clinical findings? 9
Lab findings? 4
- Clinical findings
- Thirst
- Decreased urine output
- Weight loss
- Drowsiness to coma
- Decreased skin turgor
- Dry mucous membranes
- Sunken eyes
- Tachycardia
- Orthostatic hypotension progressing to hypotension
Lab findings
- Increased HCT
- Elevated BUN/Creat
- Elevated urine sodium
- Urine SG less than 1.020
Clinical signs to monitor for ECF depletion?
- Watch hemodynamic parameters
- Urine output
- Patient daily weights
- Daily labs
- Whats normal urine output?
2. Which daily labs for ECF depletion? 3
- Normal > 30 ml/hr
- HCT
- BMP
- Serum sodium may be helpful
Compare the signs of hypovolemia to hypervolemia
Volume depletion? 8
Volume overload? 9
Volume depletion
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Tachycardia
- Flat neck veins
- Decreased skin turgor
- Dry mucosa
- Supine hypotension
- Oligouria
- Organ failure
Volume overload
- Hypertension
- Tachycardia
- Increased JVP
- Gallop
- Edema
- Pleural effusion
- Pulmonary edema
- Ascites
- Organ failure
Severe hypovolemia and hypovolemic shock
2
- 1-2 L of isotonic saline (0.9% NS) bolus/rapid infusion
2. Continue until clinical signs of hypovolemia begin to improve
Severe hypovolemia and hypovolemic shock:
Continue until clinical signs of hypovolemia begin to improve. Which would be? 3
- low blood pressure,
- low urine output,
- and/or impaired mental status
Severe hypovolemia and hypovolemic shock:
- Type of replacement fluid
1. If bleeding?
2. Otherwise?
- If bleeding: use blood to get HCT up to 35%
2. Otherwise crystalloid vs. colloid
Replacement solution for severe hypovolemia
Describe how crystalloids and colloids differ in treating severe hypovolemia?
Crystalloid saline solutions are equally effective in expanding the plasma volume as colloids but need to use 1.5-3 X as much because of extravascular distribution
Replacement solution for severe hypovolemia
1. Albumin advantages over isotonic saline? 2
- Disadvantage? 2
- Albumin advantages over isotonic saline
- More rapid plasma volume expansion (remains in the intravascular space)
- Lesser risk of pulmonary edema due to dilutional hypoalbuminemia
Disadvantages:
- cost,
- not as readily available
Replacement solution for severe hypovolemia: What about other colloids like hyperoncotic starches?
Associated with increased risk of acute kidney injury and in some studies increased mortality