Suttles Tess L, Poe John, Neumayr Tara M, Said Ahmed S
Division of Critical Care Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Mechanical Support Department, St. Louis Children's Hospital, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Front Pediatr. 2024 Feb 29;12:1346096. doi: 10.3389/fped.2024.1346096. eCollection 2024.
Fluid overload on Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation (ECMO) is associated with worse outcomes. Previous studies have attempted to quantify oxygenator-related insensible losses, as failure to account for this fluid loss may lead to inaccurate fluid balance assessment and potentially harmful clinical management, such as unnecessary exposure to diuretics, slow continuous ultrafiltration (SCUF), or continuous kidney replacement therapy (CKRT). We performed a novel study to measure insensible fluid losses in pediatric ECMO patients.
Pediatric ECMO patients were approached over eleven months in the pediatric and cardiac intensive care units. The water content of the oxygenator inflow sweep gas and exhaust gas were calculated by measuring the ambient temperature and relative humidity at frequent intervals and various sweep flow.
Nine subjects were enrolled, generating 431 data points. The cohort had a median age of 11 years IQR [0.83, 13], weight of 23.2 kg IQR [6.48, 44.28], and body surface area of 0.815 m IQR [0.315, 1.3725]. Overall, the cohort had a median sweep of 2.5 L/min [0.9, 4], ECMO flow of 3.975 L/m/min [0.75, 4.51], and a set ECMO temperature of 37 degrees Celsius [36.6, 37.2]. The calculated net water loss per L/min of sweep was 75.93 ml/day, regardless of oxygenator size or patient weight. There was a significant difference in median documented vs. calculated fluid balance incorporating the insensible fluid loss, irrespective of oxygenator size (pediatric oxygenator: 7.001 ml/kg/day [-12.37, 28.59] vs. -6.11 ml/kg/day [-17.44, 13.01], respectively, = 0.005 and adult oxygenator: 14.36 ml/kg/day [1.54, 25.77] and 9.204 ml/kg/day [-1.28, 22.05], respectively, = <0.001). We present this pilot study of measured oxygenator-associated insensible fluid losses on ECMO. Our results are consistent with prior methods and provide the basis for future studies evaluating the impact of incorporating these fluid losses into patients' daily fluid balance on patient management and outcomes.
体外膜肺氧合(ECMO)期间的液体超负荷与更差的预后相关。以往的研究试图对与氧合器相关的不显性液体丢失进行量化,因为未能考虑到这种液体丢失可能导致液体平衡评估不准确,并可能导致有害的临床管理,如不必要地使用利尿剂、缓慢持续超滤(SCUF)或连续性肾脏替代治疗(CKRT)。我们开展了一项新研究来测量儿科ECMO患者的不显性液体丢失。
在儿科和心脏重症监护病房对儿科ECMO患者进行了为期11个月的研究。通过频繁测量环境温度和相对湿度以及不同的吹扫流量,计算氧合器流入吹扫气体和排出气体的含水量。
纳入了9名受试者,产生了431个数据点。该队列的中位年龄为11岁,四分位间距[0.83, 13],体重为23.2千克,四分位间距[6.48, 44.28],体表面积为0.815平方米,四分位间距[0.315, 1.3725]。总体而言,该队列的中位吹扫流量为2.5升/分钟[0.9, 4],ECMO流量为3.975升/分钟[0.75, 4.51],设定的ECMO温度为37摄氏度[36.6, 37.2]。无论氧合器大小或患者体重如何,计算得出的每升/分钟吹扫的净失水量为75.93毫升/天。在纳入不显性液体丢失的记录液体平衡与计算液体平衡的中位数之间存在显著差异,无论氧合器大小如何(儿科氧合器:分别为7.001毫升/千克/天[-12.37, 28.59]与-6.11毫升/千克/天[-17.44, 13.01],P = 0.005;成人氧合器:分别为14.36毫升/千克/天[1.54, 25.77]与9.204毫升/千克/天[-1.28, 22.05],P = <0.001)。我们展示了这项关于ECMO上测量的与氧合器相关的不显性液体丢失的初步研究。我们的结果与先前的方法一致,并为未来评估将这些液体丢失纳入患者每日液体平衡对患者管理和预后的影响的研究提供了基础。