Does passive leg raising followed by measurement of cardiac output predict fluid responsiveness in hemodynamically unstable adults?
Hemodynamically unstable adults
Passive leg raising followed by measurement of cardiac output or related parameters
Fluid responsivenesssurrogate
Passive leg raising combined with cardiac output measurement is highlighted as the most useful test for predicting fluid responsiveness in hemodynamically unstable adults.
Passive leg raising followed by measurement of cardiac output or related parameters may be the most useful test for predicting fluid responsiveness in hemodynamically unstable adults. The usefulness of respiratory variation in the vena cava requires confirmatory studies.
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Peter Bentzer
Malmö University
Donald Griesdale
Tokyo Medical and Dental University
John H. Boyd
General Cardiology
JAMA
University of British Columbia
Lund University
Vancouver General Hospital
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Bentzer et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d775689c65a8c80448f52e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2016.12310