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Assessment of volume status

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Volume Status - The Body's Balance

  • Hypovolemia (Dehydration):

    • Vitals: Tachycardia, hypotension, orthostasis.
    • Signs: ↓ skin turgor, dry membranes, flat neck veins.
    • Labs: BUN/Cr > 20:1, ↑ hematocrit, Urine Na+ < 20 mEq/L.
  • Hypervolemia (Overload):

    • Vitals: Hypertension, bounding pulses.
    • Signs: Jugular venous distention (JVD), pulmonary crackles, pitting edema.
    • Labs: ↓ BUN/Cr, ↓ hematocrit (dilutional), Urine Na+ > 20 mEq/L.

Hypovolemia: Background, Signs, Diagnosis, Causes, Treatment

⭐ In hypovolemia, a BUN/Cr ratio > 20:1 is a classic indicator of pre-renal azotemia, as the kidneys avidly reabsorb urea with sodium and water.

Physical Exam - Hands-On Assessment

  • Hypovolemia (Volume Depletion)

    • Vitals: ↑ Heart Rate, ↓ Blood Pressure, Orthostatic hypotension.
    • Neck Veins: ↓ Jugular Venous Pressure (JVP < 3 cmH₂O).
    • Skin & Mucosa: ↓ Skin turgor (tenting), dry mucous membranes, delayed capillary refill (>2 sec).
    • Urine: ↓ Urine output (<0.5 mL/kg/hr).
  • Hypervolemia (Volume Overload)

    • Vitals: ↑ Blood Pressure.
    • Neck Veins: ↑ JVP (>8 cmH₂O), positive hepatojugular reflux.
    • Cardiopulmonary: S3 gallop, pulmonary edema (crackles/rales).
    • Extremities: Pitting peripheral edema.
    • Abdomen: Ascites.

Jugular Venous Pressure (JVP) Measurement Technique

Orthostatic Hypotension: A sensitive early indicator of hypovolemia. Defined as a drop in systolic BP by ≥20 mmHg or diastolic BP by ≥10 mmHg within 3 minutes of standing.

Lab & Imaging - The Inside Story

  • Hypovolemia Markers (Dehydration):

    • Labs:
      • BUN/Cr Ratio: >20:1 (prerenal azotemia)
      • Hematocrit/Albumin: ↑ (hemoconcentration)
      • Urine Sodium: <20 mEq/L (kidneys conserve Na)
      • Fractional Excretion of Na (FENa): <1%
      • Urine Osmolality: >450 mOsm/kg (concentrated)
    • Formula: FENa = $100 \times \frac{(Urine_{Na} \times Plasma_{Cr})}{(Plasma_{Na} \times Urine_{Cr})}$
  • Hypervolemia Markers (Fluid Overload):

    • Labs: ↓ Hct/Albumin (hemodilution); BNP >100 pg/mL
    • Imaging:
      • CXR: Pulmonary edema, Kerley B lines, pleural effusion.
      • IVC Ultrasound: Distended (>2.1 cm) with <50% respiratory collapse.

⭐ In oliguria, a FENa <1% suggests a prerenal (volume-responsive) cause, while FENa >2% points towards Acute Tubular Necrosis (ATN).

Invasive Monitoring - The Deep Dive

  • Arterial Line: Provides continuous, real-time blood pressure and mean arterial pressure (MAP). Essential for titrating vasoactive infusions and managing hemodynamically unstable patients. Allows for frequent arterial blood gas sampling.
  • Central Venous Pressure (CVP): Measures right atrial pressure to estimate right ventricular preload. Normal: 2-8 mmHg. Note: CVP is a static measure; trends over time provide more reliable information for fluid management.
  • PA Catheter:

    ⭐ Measures PCWP, a surrogate for left atrial pressure. PCWP > 18 mmHg suggests cardiogenic pulmonary edema.

Pulmonary artery catheter waveforms

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Hypovolemia presents with tachycardia, hypotension, poor skin turgor, and orthostatic changes.
  • Key lab findings suggesting dehydration include a BUN/Cr ratio > 20:1, low urine sodium (< 20 mEq/L), and FeNa < 1%.
  • Hypervolemia is characterized by jugular venous distention (JVD), pulmonary crackles, and pitting peripheral edema.
  • An S3 gallop on cardiac auscultation is a specific sign of significant volume overload.
  • Invasive monitoring shows low CVP and PCWP in hypovolemia, and high CVP/PCWP in hypervolemia.

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