Fluid assessment, fluid balance, and fluid overload in sick children: a report from the Pediatric Acute Disease Quality Initiative (ADQI) conference
-
Published:2023-11-07
Issue:3
Volume:39
Page:955-979
-
ISSN:0931-041X
-
Container-title:Pediatric Nephrology
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Pediatr Nephrol
Author:
Selewski David T., Barhight Matthew F., Bjornstad Erica C., Ricci ZaccariaORCID, de Sousa Tavares Marcelo, Akcan-Arikan Ayse, Goldstein Stuart L., Basu Rajit, Bagshaw Sean M., Alobaidi Rashid, Askenazi David J., Barreto Erin, Bayrakci Benan, Bignall O. N. Ray, Brophy Patrick, Charlton Jennifer, Chanchlani Rahul, Conroy Andrea L., Deep Akash, Devarajan Prasad, Dolan Kristin, Fuhrman Dana, Gist Katja M., Gorga Stephen M., Greenberg Jason H., Hasson Denise, Heydari Emma, Iyengar Arpana, Jetton Jennifer, Krawczeski Catherine, Meigs Leslie, Menon Shina, Morgan Catherine, Morgan Jolyn, Mottes Theresa, Neumayr Tara, Soranno Danielle, Stanski Natalja, Starr Michelle, Sutherland Scott M., Symons Jordan, Vega Molly, Zappitelli Michael, Ronco Claudio, Mehta Ravindra L., Kellum John, Ostermann Marlies,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The impact of disorders of fluid balance, including the pathologic state of fluid overload in sick children has become increasingly apparent. With this understanding, there has been a shift from application of absolute thresholds of fluid accumulation to an appreciation of the intricacies of fluid balance, including the impact of timing, trajectory, and disease pathophysiology.
Methods
The 26th Acute Disease Quality Initiative was the first to be exclusively dedicated to pediatric and neonatal acute kidney injury (pADQI). As part of the consensus panel, a multidisciplinary working group dedicated to fluid balance, fluid accumulation, and fluid overload was created. Through a search, review, and appraisal of the literature, summative consensus statements, along with identification of knowledge gaps and recommendations for clinical practice and research were developed.
Conclusions
The 26th pADQI conference proposed harmonized terminology for fluid balance and for describing a pathologic state of fluid overload for clinical practice and research. Recommendations include that the terms daily fluid balance, cumulative fluid balance, and percent cumulative fluid balance be utilized to describe the fluid status of sick children. The term fluid overload is to be preserved for describing a pathologic state of positive fluid balance associated with adverse events. Several recommendations for research were proposed including focused validation of the definition of fluid balance, fluid overload, and proposed methodologic approaches and endpoints for clinical trials.
Funder
Università degli Studi di Firenze
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Nephrology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Reference123 articles.
1. Abulebda K, Cvijanovich NZ, Thomas NJ, Allen GL, Anas N, Bigham MT, Hall M, Freishtat RJ, Sen A, Meyer K, Checchia PA, Shanley TP, Nowak J, Quasney M, Weiss SL, Chopra A, Banschbach S, Beckman E, Lindsell CJ, Wong HR (2014) Post-ICU admission fluid balance and pediatric septic shock outcomes: a risk-stratified analysis. Crit Care Med 42:397–403 2. Alobaidi R, Basu RK, DeCaen A, Joffe AR, Lequier L, Pannu N, Bagshaw SM (2020) Fluid accumulation in critically ill children. Crit Care Med 48:1034–1041 3. Arikan AA, Zappitelli M, Goldstein SL, Naipaul A, Jefferson LS, Loftis LL (2012) Fluid overload is associated with impaired oxygenation and morbidity in critically ill children. Pediatric critical care medicine : a journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies 13:253–258 4. Askenazi DJ, Koralkar R, Hundley HE, Montesanti A, Patil N, Ambalavanan N (2013) Fluid overload and mortality are associated with acute kidney injury in sick near-term/term neonate. Pediatr Nephrol 28:661–666 5. Bhaskar P, Dhar AV, Thompson M, Quigley R, Modem V (2015) Early fluid accumulation in children with shock and ICU mortality: a matched case-control study. Intensive Care Med 41:1445–1453
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|