Copyright
©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Gastroenterol. Dec 28, 2014; 20(48): 18092-18103
Published online Dec 28, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i48.18092
Published online Dec 28, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i48.18092
Ref. | Type | Conclusion |
Tenner et al[7], 2004 | Review | 250-500 mL/h or more for 48 h |
Whitcomb et al[79], 2006 | Review | Fluid bolus: maintain hemodynamicsLater: 250-500 mL/h |
Otsuki et al[91], 2006 | Review | 60-160 mL/kg per day1/3 to 1/2 to be given in 6 h |
Forsmark et al[96], 2007 | Review | Use crystalloids first,Use colloids if hematocrit < 25% or albumin < 2 g/dL |
Pandol et al[78], 2007 | Review | Severe volume depletion: 500-1000 mL/h; reduce later |
Nasr et al[8], 2011 | Review | 20 mL/kg (1-2 L) in emergency; 150-300 mL/h (3 mL/kg per hour) for 24 h |
Trikudanathan et al[49], 2012 | Review | Aggressive fluid resuscitation in patients with AP needs to be initiated with therapeutic intent |
Haydock et al[49], 2013 | Review | Lack of quality evidence to guide most basic aspects of FT providing the equipoise necessary for further RCTs |
Wu et al[31], 2013 | Review | Institutional protocols must be developed to help ensure adequate fluid resuscitation, particularly in initial 24 h |
Ref. | Year | Type of study (sample size) | Conclusion |
Mao et al[16] | 2010 | RCT (n = 155) | Rapid hemodilution increases incidence of sepsis within 28 d and in-hospital mortality. Hematocrit should be maintained between 30% and 40% in acute response stage |
Mao et al[17] | 2009 | RCT (n = 76) | Controlled fluid resuscitation offers better prognosis in patients with severe volume deficit within72 h of severe acute pancreatitis onset |
Eckerwall et al[15] | 2006 | Retrospective cohort (n = 99) | Patients receiving 4000 mL or more of fluid in first 24 h developed more respiratory complications |
Madaria et al[14] | 2011 | Retrospective cohort (n = 247) | Administration of > 4.1 L but not < 3.1 L was significantly associated with more local and systemic complications |
Kuwabara et al[75] | 2011 | Retrospective (n = 9489) | Fluid volume during first 48 h was higher in patients requiring ventilation and higher mortality in acute pancreatitis |
Parameter | Recommendation |
Fluid resuscitation | Necessary: the earlier the resuscitation, the better the outcome |
Type of fluid | Colloids and/or crystalloids: Among crystalloids, lactate Ringer’s better than normal salineUse colloids especially when albumin < 2.0 g/dL or hematocrit < 35% |
Amount of fluid | Total fluid in first 24 h: between 3 and 4 L, Not to exceed 4 L |
Rate of infusion | Initial bolus 1000 mL over one hour followed by 3 mL/kg per hour (200 mL/h) for 24-48 h |
Monitoring | Urine output > 0.5 mL/kg/h, hematocrit = 25% to 35%, drop in BUNCVP: Not good for monitoring due to third space loss and hypoalbuminemia |
Duration of resuscitation | 24-48 h, until signs of volume depletion disappear |
- Citation: Aggarwal A, Manrai M, Kochhar R. Fluid resuscitation in acute pancreatitis. World J Gastroenterol 2014; 20(48): 18092-18103
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v20/i48/18092.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v20.i48.18092