The use of Guyton’s approach to the control of cardiac output
for clinical fluid management
by Sheldon Magder
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 14, Article number: 105, Published: 04
July 2024
Abstract
Infusion of fluids
is one of the most common medical acts when resuscitating critically ill
patients. However, fluids most often are given without consideration of how
fluid infusion can actually improve tissue perfusion. Arthur Guyton’s analysis
of the circulation was based on how cardiac output is determined by the
interaction of the factors determining the return of blood to the heart, i.e.
venous return, and the factors that determine the output from the heart, i.e.
pump function. His theoretical approach can be used to understand what fluids
can and cannot do. In his graphical analysis, right atrial pressure (RAP) is at
the center of this interaction and thus indicates the status of these two
functions. Accordingly, trends in RAP and cardiac output (or a surrogate of
cardiac output) can provide important guides for the cause of a hemodynamic
deterioration, the potential role of fluids, the limits of their use, and when
the fluid is given, the response to therapeutic interventions. Use of the
trends in these values provide a physiologically grounded approach to clinical
fluid management.
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