Objectives: To assess whether, in patients under mechanical ventilation, fluid responsiveness is predicted by the effects of short respiratory holds on cardiac index estimated by esophageal Doppler. Design: Prospective, monocentric study. Setting: Medical ICU. Patients: Twenty-eight adult patients with acute circulatory failure and a decision of the clinicians in charge to administer fluids. Interventions: Before and after infusing 500 mL of saline, we measured cardiac index estimated by esophageal Doppler before and during the last 5 seconds of successive 15-second end-inspiratory occlusion and end-expiratory occlusion, separated by 1 minute. Patients in whom volume expansion increased cardiac index measured by transpulmonary thermodilution greater than or equal to 15% were defined as “fluid responders.” Cardiac index measured by the Pulse Contour Cardiac Output device (from pulse contour analysis or transpulmonary thermodilution) was used as the reference. Measurements and Main Results: End-expiratory occlusion increased cardiac index estimated by esophageal Doppler more in responders than in nonresponders (8% ± 2% vs 3% ± 1%, respectively; p
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Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology from Emergency Medicine via xlomafota13 on Inoreader http://ift.tt/2eTSYdQ
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