Fichtner Andreas, Brunner Benedikt, Kloemich Enrico, Grab Thomas, Pohl Thomas, Fieback Tobias
Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus, Technische Universität Dresden, Dresden, Saxony, Germany.
Emergency Department, Freiberg Hospital, Freiberg, Saxony, Germany.
Open Access Emerg Med. 2021 Aug 20;13:391-398. doi: 10.2147/OAEM.S321860. eCollection 2021.
A well-accepted step in emergency sonography is the estimation of a fluid deficit through Inferior Vena Cava (IVC) diameter variability with known cut-offs especially in bleeding. We sought to answer, whether a non-bleeding fluid deficit can be quantified through sonographic assessment of IVC diameter variability and related aortic parameters. Sport divers were used as human hypovolemic vasoconstriction models since immersion is known to cause relevant volume depletion through vasoconstriction and induced diuresis.
Forty-one sport divers performed 342 single and repetitive dives to account for intra- and interindividual variability and were assessed for inferior Vena Cava and neighboring aortic diameters as well as their cardiac/respiratory variations. Dive-related weight loss was measured together with sonographic vessel diameter changes inferior to the right atrium.
Highest correlation with dive-related weight loss of max. 2.9 kg per an average 47 minutes dive was found with r=0.34 for the difference of IVC maximum diameter related to minimum Aortic diameter. Single or combined parameters, as well as Collapsibility Index, showed lower or no correlations. Vascular parameters were able to explain 7.5% of the variance of fluid losses, whereas interindividual effects explained 10%. The remaining 82.5% is of mixed intraindividual counterregulatory effects.
IVC diameter changes in immersion-induced hypovolemic centralization provides qualitative information on relevant fluid loss only. Confounding factors like inter and intraindividual variability prevent a sufficient correlation for useful quantification of the experienced non-bleeding fluid deficit in the clinical setting.
在急诊超声检查中,一个被广泛认可的步骤是通过下腔静脉(IVC)直径变化并结合已知的临界值来估计液体缺失情况,尤其是在出血时。我们试图回答,是否可以通过超声评估IVC直径变化及相关主动脉参数来量化非出血性液体缺失。由于已知浸入会通过血管收缩和诱导利尿导致相关的容量耗竭,因此将运动潜水员用作人体低血容量性血管收缩模型。
41名运动潜水员进行了342次单次和重复性潜水,以考虑个体内和个体间的变异性,并评估下腔静脉和邻近主动脉的直径以及它们的心脏/呼吸变化。测量与潜水相关的体重减轻以及右心房下方超声血管直径的变化。
与潜水相关的体重减轻(平均每次47分钟潜水最大减轻2.9千克)相关性最高的是IVC最大直径与最小主动脉直径之差,r = 0.34。单个或组合参数以及塌陷指数显示出较低或无相关性。血管参数能够解释液体损失方差的7.5%,而个体间效应解释了10%。其余82.5%是个体内混合的反调节效应。
浸入诱导的低血容量性集中化过程中下腔静脉直径变化仅提供有关相关液体损失的定性信息。个体间和个体内变异性等混杂因素妨碍了在临床环境中对经历的非出血性液体缺失进行有效量化的充分相关性。