Venous return and mean systemic filling pressure:
physiology and clinical applications
by Romain Persichini, Christopher Lai, Jean-Louis Teboul,
Imane Adda, Laurent Guérin and Xavier Monnet
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 150 (2022) Published: 24
May 2022
Venous return is the flow of blood from the systemic venous
network towards the right heart. At steady state, venous return equals cardiac
output, as the venous and arterial systems operate in series. However, unlike
the arterial one, the venous network is a capacitive system with a high
compliance. It includes a part of unstressed blood, which is a reservoir that
can be recruited via sympathetic endogenous or exogenous stimulation. Guyton’s
model describes the three determinants of venous return: the mean systemic
filling pressure, the right atrial pressure and the resistance to venous
return. Recently, new methods have been developed to explore such determinants
at the bedside. In this narrative review, after a reminder about Guyton’s model
and current methods used to investigate it, we emphasize how Guyton’s
physiology helps understand the effects on cardiac output of common treatments
used in critically ill patients.
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