The Complexities of Intravenous Fluid Research: Questions of Scale, Volume, and Accumulation

Despite near ubiquity, information regarding fluids consumption at a health care systems level, and patient exposure at an individual level, is surprisingly limited in the medical literature. The epidemiology of the foundational medical intervention of intravenous fluid administration is incredibly...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Neil J Glassford, Rinaldo Bellomo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Korean Society of Critical Care Medicine 2016-11-01
Series:Korean Journal of Critical Care Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://kjccm.org/upload/pdf/kjccm-2016-00934.pdf
Description
Summary:Despite near ubiquity, information regarding fluids consumption at a health care systems level, and patient exposure at an individual level, is surprisingly limited in the medical literature. The epidemiology of the foundational medical intervention of intravenous fluid administration is incredibly complex, with millions of patients being exposed internationally every year. Fluid is being given for different reasons, to different targets, following different triggers, by different specialties in different countries, and any observations that can be made are thought to have limited external validity to other jurisdictions and patient groups. The independent effects of fluid administration and fluid accumulation are very hard to separate from other markers of illness severity and aspects of the process of care. Fluid accumulation can result in organ injury, even when the fluid is being given to purportedly ameliorate or prevent such injury, and if it were independently associated with mortality then would be an easily accessible and modifiable risk factor for subsequent morbidity or death. Despite their ubiquity, it is clear that we have limited understanding of the effects of the intravenous fluids we use daily in the most vulnerable of patient groups. The research agenda in this field is large and urgent.
ISSN:2383-4870
2383-4889