Intraoperative fluid management

Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America
Judy Thompson

Abstract

Evidence-based medicine has been slow to address the critically important issue of intraoperative fluid maintenance for surgical patients. A "rule" published by Holliday and colleagues in 1957 was the accepted practice for the initial calculation of fluid maintenance for nearly 50 years. Using this formula, the nil per os fluid deficit was based on how long it had been since the preoperative patient had last consumed anything by mouth, even water. New technology and monitoring modalities are being used to guide evidence-supported intraoperative care, leading to better outcomes for surgical patients.

References

Jan 1, 1975·International Anesthesiology Clinics·E B Furman
Mar 23, 2005·Anesthesia and Analgesia·Michael P W GrocottTong J Gan
Jul 21, 2006·Best Practice & Research. Clinical Anaesthesiology·Birgitte Brandstrup
Aug 6, 2009·Best Practice & Research. Clinical Anaesthesiology·Matthias JacobMarkus Rehm
Oct 11, 2013·JAMA : the Journal of the American Medical Association·Djillali AnnaneUNKNOWN CRISTAL Investigators
Jan 13, 2015·Pediatric Critical Care Medicine : a Journal of the Society of Critical Care Medicine and the World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies·Lynn SinitskyDavid P Inwald

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Citations

Sep 28, 2016·Anaesthesia Critical Care & Pain Medicine·Daphné MicheletSouhayl Dahmani

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