Dehydration Clinical Trial
Official title:
New Method to Detect Dehydration
1. The distribution and elimination of infusion fluids can be studied by volume kinetics,
a mathematical method based on serial analysis of the blood hemoglobin concentration.
2. The hypothesis of the present study is that the elimination of infused fluid is
retarded in the presence of dehydration, and that volume kinetics would therefore be
capable of detecting dehydration in human subjects.
3. We induce dehydration by injection graded doses of furosemide (a diuretic drug) in
healthy volunteers and the kinetics of an infusion of crystalloid fluid is compared to
when the same volunteer receives the same fluid without being in a dehydrated state.
1. Fifteen healthy male volunteers are subjected to 4 experiments. They drink 800 ml of
water at 6:00 AM to make sure they are not dehydrated when the experiments begin.
2. On two occasions the volunteer receives, at 9:00 AM, an intravenous infusion of
acetated Ringer´s solution being either 5 ml/kg or 10 ml/kg, over 15 min. The blood
hemoglobin concentration is measured during 16 occasions during 120 min by invasive
blood sampling and also non-invasively by a pulse oximeter (Masimo´s Radical 7).
3. On two other occasions, the infusions are preceded for 2 hours of deliberate
dehydration. Doses of furosemide 5 mg are repeated 3-4 times with the goal of creating
dehydration amounting to approximately 2 liters of fluid. Excreted urine is collected
and the volume measured.
4. The kinetics of each infusion is calculated by volume kinetics, and the data compared
pairwise from the experiments with and those without dehydration.
5. The accuracy and precision of the non-invasive monitoring of Hgb can be determined.
6. The study is ended with that the Hgb response between the lying and sitting position is
compared and with that the fluid balance is restored by ingestion of water.
7. Experiments are performed in the Department of Intensive Care at Linköping University
Hospital, Sweden.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Pharmacokinetics Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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