View clinical trials related to Fluid Therapy.
Filter by:The primary aim of this study is to quantify and compare the hemodynamic control of cardiac index in patients who receive either goal-directed therapy or standard hemodynamic management in lung resection surgery
A prospective, double-blinded study. The present study consisted in applying Stroke volume variation fluid guided therapy to old patients (65 years old) undergoing radical resection of colon surgery. The aim of this study is to compare the effects of norepinephrine and phenylephrine in treating perioperative hypotension, and to find the safest and most effective vasopressor for elderly.
This is a single-center prospective randomized control trial (RCT) to determine whether the continuous monitoring of the plethysmographic variability index (PVI) during low-risk surgeries, can be used to optimize the intraoperative fluid administration. Low-risk patients that attend our day surgery unit, and who will be operated under general anesthesia, will be randomized to either a liberal fluid group, a restrictive fluid group or a dynamic monitoring group (PVI-directed). The amount of fluid infused together with the time to discharge, will be assessed in each participant during the postoperative period along with additional secondary outcomes.
This prospective observational study aims to (i) asses intensive care doctors trigger for and the expected physiological response to a fluid bolus and (ii) evaluate the patient's actual physiological response to a single fluid bolus at one hour post-bolus for 100 adult patients admitted to the intensive care unit will be included in the study.
Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) as guide for tailoring perioperative fluid therapy to achieve individualized hemodynamic endpoint, target hemodynamic goals of stroke volume index (SVI) greater than 35 mL/m2 and cardiac index greater than 2.5 L/min/m2 and tissue oxygen delivery. Lactate levels as a surrogate indicator of organ perfusion as measured by arterial blood gas analysis intraoperatively, after 12 hours and 48 hrs postoperatively
Fluid administration during and after surgery is an essential part of postoperative care to maintain the patients' fluid and biochemical balance. Abdominal surgical procedures are associated with dehydration from preoperative fasting, bowel preparation, and intra- and postoperative fluid and electrolyte loss. So, perioperative fluid management has been a topic of much debate over years and has intensified especially over the past several years.
In this retrospective cohort study, the investigators reviewed and analyzed the electronic medical records of consecutive patients who underwent distal pancreatectomy either via laparotomy or laparoscopy. Intraoperative fluid administration amount, postoperative complications, length of hospital stay, and readmission rate were evaluated. The total fluid amounts were calculated using the sum of colloids multiplied by 1.5 or 2.0 and crystalloids.
Extensive tumour debulking challenges both surgeon and anaesthesiologist but promotes survival in late-stage ovarian cancer patients. Little is known about the intraoperative fluid balance and its impact on morbidity and mortality.
This is a pilot study to investigate whether patients at advanced age are fluid responders via a reversible fluid challenge, the passive leg raise test. This will be measured with a non-invasive cardiac output monitor, the LiDCO (LiDCO Hemodynamic monitoring) .
To evaluate the application of fluid-infusion therapy with the combination of stroke volume variation (SVV) and cardiac index (CI) as the primary judgment in non-severe patients underwent resection of gastrointestinal tumor. Fifty patients (ASA Ⅰ-Ⅱ, 26-55 years old, cardiac functional gradingⅠ) scheduled for gastrointestinal tumor surgery were divided into two groups randomly: group C with CI as the primary judgment and group S with the combination of SVV and CI as the primary judgment.