by Pierre-Grégoire Guinot, Pierre-Alain Bahr, Stefan Andrei,
Bogdan A. Popescu, Vincenza Caruso, Paul-Michel Mertes, Vivien Berthoud, Maxime
Nguyen and Belaid Bouhemad
Critical Care volume 26,
Article number: 305 (2022)
Background
Fluid overload and venous congestion are associated with
morbi-mortality in the ICU (intensive care unit). Administration of diuretics
to correct the fluid balance is common, although there is no strong
relationship between the consequent fluid loss and clinical improvement. The
aim of the study was to evaluate the ability of the portal pulsatility index,
the renal venous impedance index, and the VEXUS score (venous ultrasound
congestion score) to predict appropriate diuretic-induced fluid depletion.
Methods
The study had a prospective, observational, single-center
observational design and was conducted in a university-affiliated
medico-surgical ICU. Adult patients for whom the clinician decided to introduce
loop diuretic treatment were included. Hemodynamic and ultrasound measurements
(including the portal pulsatility index, renal venous impedance index and VEXUS
score) were performed at inclusion and 2 hours after the initiation of the
diuretics. The patients’ characteristics were noted at inclusion, 24 h later,
and at ICU discharge. The appropriate diuretic-induced fluid depletion was
defined by a congestive score lower than 3 after diuretic fluid depletion. The
congestive score included clinical and biological parameters of congestion.
Results
Eighty-one patients were included, and 43 (53%) patients
presented with clinically significant congestion score at inclusion.
Thirty-four patients (42%) had an appropriate response to diuretic-induced
fluid depletion. None of the left- and right-sided echocardiographic parameters
differed between the two groups. The baseline portal pulsatility index was the
best predictor of appropriate response to diuretic-induced fluid depletion (AUC = 0.80,
CI95%:0.70–0.92, p = 0.001), followed by the renal venous impedance index
(AUC = 0.72, CI95% 0.61–0.84, p = 0.001). The baseline VEXUS score
(AUC of 0.66 CI95% 0.53–0.79, p = 0.012) was poorly predictive of
appropriate response to diuretic-induced fluid depletion.
Conclusion
The portal pulsatility index and the renal venous impedance
index were predictive of the appropriate response to diuretic-induced fluid
depletion in ICU patients. The portal pulsatility index should be evaluated in
future randomized studies.
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