Resuscitation
Fluid and Electrolyte Management
Intravenous fluids (IV fluids) are routinely used to restore effective blood volume and maintain organ perfusion during resuscitation.
Optimal dose and type of IV fluids to be used during resuscitation is still an area of debate and may therefore be responsible for significant variability in global resuscitation practices.
Assessments of 'fluid volume' have included - CVP and PAP as surrogates for R and L filling pressures, with PAP especially now falling out of favour as offering little extra information.
Problems though:
Fluid types
Ongoing debate with the theoretical benefit of high-molecular weight compounds presumed to stay longer in the intravascular space not proving superior.
Albumin
Concentrated albumin may have the added benefit in some circumstances of conferring benefits of enhanced immunity.
Endogenous albumin exhibits antioxidant effects, scavenges free radicals, serves as a critical transport protein for many molecules and medications, and may modulate inflammatory response
Starches
group of semi-synthetic colloids prepared by hydroxyethylation of amylopectin from sorghum, corn, or potatoes
early starches were toxic primarily related to coagulation and accumulation. Later starches much better.
no clear benefit compared with crystalloid
Crystalloid
various with different amounts of K+, Cl-, Mg++, Lactate etc
Cl- rich solutions have been shown to induce renal art vasoconstriction, AKI, hyperchloraemic acidosis, GI dysfunction and secretion of inflammatory cytokines.
One of the key differences between 0.9 % saline and buffered/balanced crystalloids is the presence of additional anions, such as lactate, acetate, malate and gluconate, which act as physiological buffers to generate bicarbonate.
acetate has been associated with a reduction in myocardial contractility and vasodilation
According to the Stewart physiochemical approach to describing acid‐base balance,
fluid pH is in part determined by the SID, which is the sum of the strong cation concentrations in the solution. Extracellular fluid has a
SID of 40mEq/l. Saline =0, Ringer's lactate and Hartmann's (both hypotonic solutions) are 28 & 27.
risk of Ca++ containing solutions (Ringer's, Hartmann's) causing precipitation and coagulation when mixed with blood products and causing ceftriaxone to form an insoluble salt.
| 0.9%Saline | Ringer's | Hartmann's | Plasma-Lyte-148 |
Na+ | 154 | 130 | 129 | 140 |
K+ | | 4 | 5 | 5 |
Cl- | 154 | 109 | 109 | 98 |
Ca++ | | 3 | 2.5 | |
Gluconate | | | | 23 |
Acetate | | | | 27 |
Mg++ | | | | 1.5 |
Actual osmolarity | 286 | 256 | 256 | 271 |
pH | 4.5-7 | 5-7 | 5-7 | 4-8 |
Sodium bicarbonate
produces a transient increase in Na+, while its buffering action raises serum & urine pH
especially useful in
TCA overdose - by raising serum pH, increases non-ionised drug, decreases binding to Na+ channels
aspirin overdose - alkalises urine which enhances elimination
Beneficial in settings where there is Na bicarb loss eg diarrhoea and renal tubular acidosis but treatment of 'the no.' in other conditions has not been shown to improve outcome or mortality. In particular, settings in which IV bicarb does NOT improve outcomes include DKA, lactic acidosis, septic shock, cardiac arrest and intraoperative metabolic acidosis.
Problems include:
Sodium Acetate
2 acetate anion forms acetyl CoA and enters the citric acid cycle; the final by-products, CO2 and H2O, are in a rapid equilibrium with bicarbonate through the catalyst activity of carbonic anhydrase.
Na acetate is less reliant on carbonic anhydrase for the alkalaemia it causes and is metabolised to a great extent in skeletal M.
more dangerous in higher doses used in dialysis (myocardial depression and hypotension)
Special conditions
Vasoactive agents
Not enough clinical evidence to unequivocally recommend one agent over another in every clinical scenario, although some have more generally accepted preferential use, eg. NorAdrenaline as the initial vasopressor as per Surviving Sepsis Campaign (Septic Shock) and generally in Neurogenic Shock associated with spinal pathology.
The literature will ascribe different weightings of action of various agents on each receptor. eg. Adrenaline said to be more β than ∝ in some and equivocal in others. The table included here is an example of one comparison of affinity and preferential setting.
Relevant receptors:
β1: mostly chronotropic and inotropic effects
β2: mostly chronotropic and vasodilatory
∝: peripheral vasoconstriction
V1: smooth muscle contraction of vessels
V2: collecting tubule receptor - regulates water retention
dopaminergic: renal artery vasodilation
inotropes
increase myocardial contractility
adrenaline
∝ & >β
β1 +ve inotropy, chronotropy and β2 vasodilation and bronchodilation. ∝1 increases
SVR
dobutamine
isoprenaline
β1 & β2
very powerful chronotrope
pure β and doesn't cause vasoconstriction, so peripheral IV use is possible
ephedrine
∝ & β
+ve inotropy, both vasodilation and vasoconstriction with vasoconstriction at higher doses
direct ∝ action as well as indirect action displacing NorAdrenaline, which also therefore causes Tachyphylaxis.
similar to adrenaline but lasts longer
used especially during pregnancy as does not significantly affect uterine flow
vasopressors
vasoconstrictors cause increased systemic and/or pulmonary vascular resistance (SVR, PVR)
noradrenaline
vasopressin
V1, V2 and V3 agonist as well as OTR (oxytocin rec)
vasoconstriction (V1 rec), renal water retention (V2 rec), ↑ACTH (V3 rec in pituitary) and vasodilation (OTR rec breast, uterus, aorta, pulm art)
does cause some venoconstriction thereby increasing venous return (preload)
useful in septic shock
metaraminol
terlipressin
synthetic, long-acting analogue of vasopressin with t1/2 of 6/24 compared with vasopressin 6mins
common use - oesophageal varices
Dose: initial 1-2mg depending on weight, then 1mg per 4-6/24
methylene blue
inhibitor of nitric oxide synthase and guanylate cyclase
useful in vasoplegia associated with various drugs, eg. Heparin,
ACE inhibitors, CCF etc
also useful in Hepatorenal Syndrome in which pulmonary vasodilation is thought secondary to ↑cGMP
also useful in Methaemoglobinaemia amongst other conditions
Dose: 1.5-2mg/kg over 20mins
inodilators
inotropic effects with vasodilation
milrinone
phosphodiesterase inhibitor increases intracellular cAMP
inotrope and vasodilator
commonly used in cardiac failure
Dose: 50mcg/kg initial, infusion @ 0.375-0.75mcg/kg/min
levosimendan
increases cardiac contractility by Ca sensitisation of Troponin C
vasodilator and cardiac protection by opening of sarcolemmal and mitochondrial K+ ATP channels, respectively
Dose: 3-36mcg/kg initial, infusion @ 0.05-0.6mcg/kg/m
other
Intubation
inadequate oxygenation by other non-invasive methods eg lung pathology
inadequate ventilatory drive eg. neuromuscular pathology
inadequate airway patency eg. local physical pathology/trauma
imminent potential for any of the above
References include: