Abstract

BackgroundOver the past 16 years, sepsis management has been guided by large-volume fluid administration to achieve certain hemodynamic optimization as advocated in the Rivers protocol. However, the safety of such practice has been questioned because large-volume fluid administration is associated with fluid overload and carries the worst outcome in patients with sepsis. Researchers in multiple studies have declared that using less fluid leads to increased survival, but they did not describe how to administer fluids in a timely and appropriate manner.Case presentationAn 86-year-old previously healthy Sundanese man was admitted to the intensive care unit at our institution with septic shock, acute kidney injury, and respiratory distress. Standard care was implemented during his initial care in the high-care unit; nevertheless, his condition worsened, and he was transferred to the intensive care unit. We describe the timing of fluid administration and elaborate on the amount of fluids needed using a conservative fluid regimen in a continuum of resuscitated sepsis.ConclusionsBecause fluid depletion in septic shock is caused by capillary leak and pathologic vasoplegia, continuation of fluid administration will drive intravascular fluid into the interstitial space, thereby producing marked tissue edema and disrupting vital oxygenation. Thus, fluids have the power to heal or kill. Therefore, management of patients with sepsis should entail early vasopressors with adequate fluid resuscitation followed by a conservative fluid regimen.

Highlights

  • Over the past 16 years, sepsis management has been guided by large-volume fluid administration to achieve certain hemodynamic optimization as advocated in the Rivers protocol

  • Because fluid depletion in septic shock is caused by capillary leak and pathologic vasoplegia, continuation of fluid administration will drive intravascular fluid into the interstitial space, thereby producing marked tissue edema and disrupting vital oxygenation

  • Management of patients with sepsis should entail early vasopressors with adequate fluid resuscitation followed by a conservative fluid regimen

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Summary

Conclusions

Current evidence on fluids and sepsis urges us to reconsider the fluid regimen in the management of patients with sepsis because aggressive fluid administration after a state of resuscitated sepsis is well-documented to have the worst outcome. Patients with sepsis respond poorly to fluids because a massive and erratic cytokine storm results in arteriovenodilation and microcirculatory dysfunction during the early stages of septic shock; fluid administered during the resuscitation phase is best given with vasopressors and early. After this phase, fluids must be tapered to prevent inadvertent fluid overload, which will worsen oxygen transport at the cellular level. Perhaps every clinician ought to be extra vigilant in prescribing the most routine drug of all, fluids

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