Results 211 to 220 of about 76,795 (260)
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Predictors to Intravenous Fluid Responsiveness

Journal of Intensive Care Medicine, 2017
Management with intravenous fluids can improve cardiac output in some surgical patients. Management with static preload indicators, such as central venous pressure and pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, has not demonstrated a suitable relationship with changes in the cardiac output induced by intravenous fluid therapy. Dynamic indicators, such as the
Jorge Iván, Alvarado Sánchez   +2 more
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Fluid status and fluid responsiveness

Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2010
Fluid boluses are a key element of hemodynamic resuscitation, but overuse of fluids also can be harmful. It is thus important to understand how fluids actually improve clinical problems and how one can predict fluid responsiveness. It is also important to understand potential limitations of fluid therapy.Currently there is a lot of attention being paid
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Hemodynamic instability and fluid responsiveness

Canadian Journal of Anesthesia/Journal canadien d'anesthésie, 2013
The rapid response team was called to evaluate a 64-yr-old hypotensive and hypoxic female patient hospitalized for deep venous thrombosis. Low-molecular-weight heparin had been initiated two days previously. The rapid response team observed her vital signs: heart rate, 110 beats min; blood pressure, 90/65 mmHg; and oxygen saturation, 90% while ...
Francis, Toupin   +3 more
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Stimuli-Responsive Peptide Nanostructures at the Fluid–Fluid Interface

2013
The self-organization of peptide-based nanostructures at a confined fluid-fluid interface, for example, the air-water or oil-water interface, is important in the context of stabilizing macroscopic soft-matter foams and emulsions. The unique ability to design interfacial nanostructures by controlling the subtle cooperativity that drives peptide self ...
Zhao, Chun-Xia, Middelberg, Anton P.J.
openaire   +4 more sources

Echocardiographic measurement of fluid responsiveness

Current Opinion in Critical Care, 2006
Fluid responsiveness is a relatively new concept. It enables the efficacy of volume expansion to be predicted before use, rather than assessed afterwards, thus avoiding inappropriate fluid infusion. Echocardiography is a fantastic noninvasive tool which can directly visualize the heart and assess cardiac function.
Cyril, Charron   +3 more
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Fluid Requirement and Fluid Responsiveness

2020
Volume expansion should be limited in a restrictive management, and tolerance of volume expansion should be assessed. Small hyperkinetic left ventricle, left ventricular obstruction, and small IVC are associated with fluid responsiveness. Passive leg raising maneuver is the best way to assess fluid responsiveness in spontaneously breathing ...
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Predicting fluid responsiveness

Trends in Anaesthesia and Critical Care, 2012
Summary Fluid therapy is a key component of resuscitation of critically ill patients. However, inadvertent administration of intravenous fluids can have deleterious effects on the patient outcome. Thus, the ability to identify patients who would respond to fluid administration by increasing stroke volume and hence cardiac output is of vital importance.
Zubair U. Mohamed, Jost W. Mullenheim
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Assessment of Fluid Requirements: Fluid Responsiveness

2010
Fluid administration is the first-line therapy in many patients with circulatory failure, though many patients may not respond to it. Accordingly, it is important to determine the chances of the patient responding to fluids. Assessing fluid responsiveness with the dynamic approach is based on the Frank–Starling relationship: using either heart–lung ...
Michel Slama, Julien Maizel
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The prediction of fluid responsiveness

Intensive Care Medicine, 2022
Monnet, Xavier   +2 more
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Fluid Responsiveness and the Six Guiding Principles of Fluid Resuscitation

Critical Care Medicine, 2016
The advanced life support technology, which is provided in the ICU, is intended to provide temporary physiologic support for patients with reversible organ dysfunction allowing homeostatic mechanisms to return the patients to their previous level of functioning (1).
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