Abstract

Paracentesis is commonly used to manage patient discomfort due to ascites. The relationship between ascites pressure, ascites volume, and patient discomfort has not been elucidated. We prospectively enrolled adult patients with non-malignant ascites undergoing outpatient therapeutic paracenteses from 2021 to 2024 at a tertiary care hospital. Patients completed a validated symptom questionnaire (ASI-7, maximum score 35) before, immediately after, and 1week after paracentesis. An open-ended manometer was used to measure ascites pressure at the beginning and end of paracentesis. Mixed effect linear regression was performed to evaluate the relationships between patient characteristics, pressure, volume, and symptoms. One hundred and fifty paracentesis procedures among 48 unique patients with an average Model for End Stage Liver Disease-Sodium 3.0 of 16.7 were included. An average of 6.5L was drained, which reduced abdominal pressure from a mean of 13.7 to 6.0cm H2O (10.1 to 4.4mmHg, p<0.001) and mean symptom score from 22.6 to 6.5 (p<0.001). Regression models identified that symptoms and abdominal pressure linearly correlated above a pressure of 6cm H2O or ASI-7 score of 16 (p<0.01). Taller patients required about 670ml additional drainage per inch above the cohort mean height (5'8″) to achieve the same symptom relief. Pressure measured at the bedside can be used to explore changes in abdominal pressure during paracentesis. Pressure, volume, and patient level factors such as height contribute to patient symptoms but cannot fully explain discomfort associated with ascites and relief after paracentesis.

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