“Should I give them more fluid?”
Extremely common question during AKI referrals from junior docs.
⛔️ Fluid management is tricky, often misunderstood, & can cause huge iatrogenic harm ⛔️
We try to convey important principles in THREAD 👇
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Currently too often patients with high creatinine are given too much IV fluid, driven by an AKI ➡️ fluid reflex
We’ve seen 7 litres be given in one shift.
Medics & surgeons, juniors & seniors, it seems everyone loves to reach for extra IV fluid (especially if urine output poor)
Why does huge volume IV fluid ‘resuscitation’ consistently occur?
Lots of reasons, including FALSE beliefs:
🛑 IV fluid always “treats AKI”
🛑 Hypotension = hypovolaemia
🛑 Lactate >2 means fluid deficiency
🛑 Septic patients are very hypovolaemic
The rule with IV fluids and AKI is to remember this 5 word phrase:
💥 💥 Aim for euvolaemia, then stop💥 💥
Fluid status is like Goldilocks - hypovolaemia is bad for the kidneys BUT excess volume is also harmful for renal function and will cause other complications too.
It is easy to say “target euvolaemia” - but we agree it is more difficult to do!
Fluid status assessment is certainly made harder by a belief that we must only rely on a snapshot assessment of examination features which are NOT specific / sensitive / reliable to elicit like.…