Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia

Abstract Background Kinetic analysis of crystalloid fluid yields a central distribution volume (V c) of the same size as the expected plasma volume (approximately 3 L) except during general anesthesia during which V c might be only half as large. The present study examined whether this difference is...

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Main Author: Robert G. Hahn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2024-03-01
Series:BMC Anesthesiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12871-024-02494-w
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author Robert G. Hahn
author_facet Robert G. Hahn
author_sort Robert G. Hahn
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Kinetic analysis of crystalloid fluid yields a central distribution volume (V c) of the same size as the expected plasma volume (approximately 3 L) except during general anesthesia during which V c might be only half as large. The present study examined whether this difference is due to influence of the intravascular albumin balance. Methods A population volume kinetic analysis according to a three-compartment model was performed based on retrospective data from 160 infusion experiments during which 1–2.5 L of crystalloid fluid had been infused intravenously over 20–30 min. The plasma dilution based on blood hemoglobin (Hb) and plasma albumin (Alb) was measured on 2,408 occasions and the urine output on 454 occasions. One-third of the infusions were performed on anesthetized patients while two-thirds were given to awake healthy volunteers. Results The Hb-Alb dilution difference was four times greater during general anesthesia than in the awake state (+ 0.024 ± 0.060 versus − 0.008 ± 0.050; mean ± SD; P < 0.001) which shows that more albumin entered the plasma than was lost by capillary leakage. The Hb-Alb dilution difference correlated strongly and positively with the kinetic parameters governing the rate of fluid transfer through the fast-exchange interstitial fluid compartment (k 12 and k 21) and inversely with the size of V c. Simulations suggest that approximately 200 mL of fluid might be translocated from the interstitial space to the plasma despite ongoing fluid administration. Conclusions Pronounced plasma volume expansion early during general anesthesia is associated with a positive intravascular albumin balance that is due to accelerated lymphatic flow. This phenomenon probably represents adjustment of the body fluid volumes to anesthesia-induced vasodilatation.
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spelling doaj.art-0ff85d7e340a4a7ab67f2a52eb2fbde02024-03-31T11:33:20ZengBMCBMC Anesthesiology1471-22532024-03-012411910.1186/s12871-024-02494-wAccelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesiaRobert G. Hahn0Department of Clinical Sciences, Karolinska Institutet at Danderyd HospitalAbstract Background Kinetic analysis of crystalloid fluid yields a central distribution volume (V c) of the same size as the expected plasma volume (approximately 3 L) except during general anesthesia during which V c might be only half as large. The present study examined whether this difference is due to influence of the intravascular albumin balance. Methods A population volume kinetic analysis according to a three-compartment model was performed based on retrospective data from 160 infusion experiments during which 1–2.5 L of crystalloid fluid had been infused intravenously over 20–30 min. The plasma dilution based on blood hemoglobin (Hb) and plasma albumin (Alb) was measured on 2,408 occasions and the urine output on 454 occasions. One-third of the infusions were performed on anesthetized patients while two-thirds were given to awake healthy volunteers. Results The Hb-Alb dilution difference was four times greater during general anesthesia than in the awake state (+ 0.024 ± 0.060 versus − 0.008 ± 0.050; mean ± SD; P < 0.001) which shows that more albumin entered the plasma than was lost by capillary leakage. The Hb-Alb dilution difference correlated strongly and positively with the kinetic parameters governing the rate of fluid transfer through the fast-exchange interstitial fluid compartment (k 12 and k 21) and inversely with the size of V c. Simulations suggest that approximately 200 mL of fluid might be translocated from the interstitial space to the plasma despite ongoing fluid administration. Conclusions Pronounced plasma volume expansion early during general anesthesia is associated with a positive intravascular albumin balance that is due to accelerated lymphatic flow. This phenomenon probably represents adjustment of the body fluid volumes to anesthesia-induced vasodilatation.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12871-024-02494-wBloodHemodilutionFluid balanceInfusionPharmacokineticsRinger’s solution
spellingShingle Robert G. Hahn
Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
BMC Anesthesiology
Blood
Hemodilution
Fluid balance
Infusion
Pharmacokinetics
Ringer’s solution
title Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
title_full Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
title_fullStr Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
title_full_unstemmed Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
title_short Accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
title_sort accelerated lymph flow from infusion of crystalloid fluid during general anesthesia
topic Blood
Hemodilution
Fluid balance
Infusion
Pharmacokinetics
Ringer’s solution
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12871-024-02494-w
work_keys_str_mv AT robertghahn acceleratedlymphflowfrominfusionofcrystalloidfluidduringgeneralanesthesia