Abstract

Fluid therapy is a rapidly evolving yet imprecise clinical practice based upon broad assumptions, species-to-species extrapolations, obsolete experimental evidence, and individual preferences. Although widely recognized as a mainstay therapy in human and veterinary medicine, fluid therapy is not always benign and can cause significant harm through fluid overload, which increases patient morbidity and mortality. As with other pharmaceutical substances, fluids exert physiological effects when introduced into the body and therefore should be considered as “drugs.” In human medicine, an innovative adaptation of pharmacokinetic analysis for intravenous fluids known as volume kinetics using serial hemoglobin dilution and urine output has been developed, refined, and investigated extensively for over two decades. Intravenous fluids can now be studied like pharmaceutical drugs, leading to improved understanding of their distribution, elimination, volume effect, efficacy, and half-life (duration of effect) under various physiologic conditions, making evidence-based approaches to fluid therapy possible. This review article introduces the basic concepts of volume kinetics, its current use in human and animal research, as well as its potential and limitations as a research tool for fluid therapy research in veterinary medicine. With limited evidence to support our current fluid administration practices in veterinary medicine, a greater understanding of volume kinetics and body water physiology in veterinary species would ideally provide some evidence-based support for safer and more effective intravenous fluid prescriptions in veterinary patients.

Highlights

  • Fluid therapy paradigms are constantly changing (1–3) due to new discoveries (4, 5) and ongoing debate on the ideal fluid choice, dose, rate, and efficacy in different patient populations (6–8)

  • In response to the call for more scientific research to build an evidence-based foundation for veterinary fluid therapy, the purpose of this review is to introduce the basic concepts of volume kinetics (VK), its current use in human and animal research, as well as its potential and limitations as a research tool for fluid therapy research in veterinary medicine

  • Volume kinetics is an innovative research method that is gaining recognition for its wealth of accumulated evidence in this new era where clinicians are searching for context-sensitive fluid therapy paradigms

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Fluid therapy paradigms are constantly changing (1–3) due to new discoveries (4, 5) and ongoing debate on the ideal fluid choice, dose, rate, and efficacy in different patient populations (6–8). Volume Kinetics of hospitalized patients, fluid therapy has the potential to cause fluid overload which increases morbidity and mortality (12), especially in cats (13), yet we have little evidence to support our current fluid administration practices in this species (9). Intravenous fluids can be studied like pharmaceutical drugs, leading to improved understanding of their time-volume effects or elimination half-life on plasma and interstitial fluid compartments (30), making evidence-based approaches to fluid therapy possible. This concept originally served as a research model for humans (30–33), a handful of experimental studies have been performed in animals including rabbits (34), pigs (35), and sheep (36–45). In response to the call for more scientific research to build an evidence-based foundation for veterinary fluid therapy, the purpose of this review is to introduce the basic concepts of VK, its current use in human and animal research, as well as its potential and limitations as a research tool for fluid therapy research in veterinary medicine

BASIC PHARMACOKINETIC CONCEPTS AND MODELS
BASIC CONCEPTS OF VOLUME KINETICS
HISTORY AND EVOLUTION OF VOLUME KINETIC MODELING
Volume kineticsa
MASS BALANCE PRINCIPLES
CORRECTIONS FOR HEMOGLOBIN LOSS
CORRECTIONS FOR ALTERNATION IN MEAN CORPUSCULAR VOLUME AND OSMOTIC FLUID SHIFT
VOLUME KINETIC MODELS IN PHYSIOLOGICAL CONTEXTS
Healthy animals
Sick animals
CLINICAL AND RESEARCH APPLICATIONS
Published Work in Human Literature
Previous Work in Animal Research Models
OF VOLUME KINETICS
Findings
CONCLUSIONS
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